This is true, but at first all I saw was a link. And then later, the photos magically appeared. You are some kind of trickster coin demon.
You can't bend it back, and any attempt will make it worse than it already is. Even with the bend, and the cleaning (assuming it is gold) this...
If it wasn't damaged that was a good coin. Some poor numismatist is lighting a candle somewhere.
It's the old bait and switch. They rope you in with the promise of big bucks, and now you are cleaning toilets with a toothbrush. Wondering what...
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Compare your 2 to the photo. [ATTACH]
Compare your 2, with the photo. [ATTACH]
All dimes, quarters and half dollars are currently minted on blanks that consists of outer layers of copper-nickel (75% copper and 25% nickel)...
Damage on the head lowers the value. Last photo of the reverse appears cleaned. 2-3 cents.
2-3 cents.
Well you don't do a million dollars all at once. It's the same money rolled over. It adds up over time. I can't get halves but people do a few...
Yes on environment. And on the second photo I can see it is a Philly. Still decent, but no miracle. Funny how in the 1st photo it looks like an S....
The Canadian 77 has the maple leaf and is smaller in size than the British new penny.
There are a number of varieties for the 1818. Yours appears to be "normal date". Where the first or the 2nd 8 is not small. I don't think this...
Looks like a mint mark, which would make this a very valuable coin. I can't really tell. Perhaps another clear photo of the mint mark area.
Read post #9 in this thread.
Too many inferior Chinese made tools at HF. If that dime is MS (and IDK) it's in a 63 area and is prob only a very slight premium over melt.
Books can go "media mail", which is the lowest rate there is. But it probably doesn't allow for overseas. Media mail is slow and unreliable....
Canada has some nice large cents.
25 cents. Damage.
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