It did stay up over a week, some paper silver players, made a little off of the bullion market without putting their physical silver into play.
Mike, I thought that at first, but when I clicked on the photo to enlarge, there seemed to be a thin line going over the surface of the 'T'...
I would assume it is cleaned and may go detail due to that and the scratch on the back under 'Cent', but worth the grading. There is a small dot...
Thank you Richard, but if I may offer a suggestion. Many on the board have advanced degrees in chemistry also, but 99+% do not. I could have used...
The copper clad on late cents is very active, in fact it begins to tarnish very shortly after striking, but the tarnish in itself is protective as...
I feel it detracts.
Believe it or not, the Salton Sea in the '50s-60s' was an excellent fishing and tourist area. Many movie stars from Palms Springs would come there...
J69, please do not repeat post to different subforums. Once only on site. Thanks Jim
I think what you are asking is about the extra info, You have to pay most TPG companies to add the extra info where they are certifying that it is...
As with most forum sites there are robots (bots) recording any scrap of info it is programmed to gather. This site ( when I just checked) had 43...
Kirkuleez, for my own knowledge, does the plating industry have a device that can monitor the thickness ( that thin for example) so the plating...
Yes, I know, best of luck.
Nothing valuable. They were made in a set with all of the states and sold to the public for high price and expectations they could retire on the...
So are some moderators, so limit it to one so I don't have to delete the other 2. Thanks
Because the government statutes that define the value of the coin uses the % of the metals, both in the core as well as any cladding, the coins...
Well I do not possess info on the chemical composition of Thad's compounds, but yes, within the realm of nature, all things can vaporize, just not...
No more political discussions! Read the Rules.
If it is a 'sniffer', the chemical would have to be volatile. If it was volatile it would eventually disappear or drop below detectable levels. To...
My understanding was that the layer was very thin ( one or couple of molecules) and was attracted to the surface of the metal and thus would not...
And we read every one of his posts :)
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