Ahh air... Why did anyone pay to slab that one anyway?
I crack them out and put them in my Danscos. Freedom.
I've never seen a coin with a round obverse and rectangular reverse. That is truly innovative Ruben. Mad props.
I think the coins raw would be in the $40 range. I wouldn't pay any extra for the slabs.
There is no repairing it. Unfortunately, those marks are there to stay.
My Grandmother gave me a circulated 1941 Mercury dime when I was either 4 or 5 years old. Although my Mercury collection is now a MS set, that...
You are allowed to collect, just not commercially trade coins.
There is plenty more to learn than just grading. Counterfeit detection and variety attribution to name a couple. It really is a highly...
It suggests that there is only one no arrows variety. That is the reason that I suggested checking the diagnostics of that coin. There is no...
The link is for a no arrows.
I don't like some of the details, especially the date and mint mark. Here is a genuine example for...
I would love for that to be a real coin Ruben.
Wow, that is ugly. Hopefully the seller can correct the problem and you can get all excited again when you get the package in the mail.
Looks like a VF-35.
Exactly my thought. The strike is incomplete, but all of the other proof characteristics are there. A beautiful coin either way.
Well, I would prefer only one entry per person. But you can do an obverse and reverse.
This coin is under graded, an obvious MS-70. Typical PCGS.
It doesn't look cleaned anymore, but it does look thumbed. Still looks better than a black coin.
I won't pay a premium for toning, I consider it a bonus if a coin is toned though.
I bought a PCGS PR-64 OGH 1881 three cent nickle for $200. Sent it to NCS and got back a PR-67. I don't have the coin anymore, but it was the...
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