Nice, problem-free AU 1865 3 Cent Nickel. Cool thing about it is the reverse is 180 degrees rotated! Not to mention the cool rim cud on the...
The 1798 is S-158. I know the reverse die crack anywhere. Tough R-4 variety. The 1800/79 is one of about a dozen possibilities that I do not know...
The coin was raw and listed for over $2500, and a specific grade was listed. Two major violations that got it taken down.
I reported it to @Jack D. Young , who worked his magic.
T’ain’t BU
It is pretty close, but I think the first 1 is too close to the denticle. [ATTACH]
I am using a digital copy of the 1st-edition Newcomb book, so I am probably missing several varieties, but that is the best I have for sub-$50...
1851 N-28. R3+. $8 [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
I usually find that slabs make a coin I want more expensive, but sometimes the slab helps in keeping the coin cheap. While I have never had a...
I think VF-20 is spot-on for the details. I can’t get past those scratches, though... [ATTACH]
How long ago did you buy these? :o
Where does @C-B-D find such great coins? :eek:
As a complete opposite to the falling-apart dies that struck my 1813 half dollar, This coin was struck from rather fresh dies. I attribute it as...
It appears the discernable presence of the left side of the leaf is the delineating factor, judging from the pictures above. Mine has the left...
[ATTACH] [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
Should I? [ATTACH] [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
[ATTACH] Not much there.
That is what I thought. The PCGS VF-20 on CoinFacts had a bit of a leaf left, which made me confused as to where the delineation occurred.
:(
I really hate attributing die states, but the LDS O-109 is quite fun. So, what thinketh thou? [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
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