Regrade. I thought it was either 63 or 64.
The ability to view your set online is a good perk. I've not done that, but I ought to.
Actually, I was referring to the one posted by Markus 1959, I think, not Andy's coin.
Sorry, but I have one more thing to add. On your way into the luncheon, you're given a freeby, which is a slabbed, but not graded coin that's part...
Oh, I agree with the writer about the PCGS luncheons. My wife and I went to three of these in a row and enjoyed the free food. The camaraderie,...
I have several PCGS Registry Sets. My highest ranking one is my Washington 25c set, the silver issues, with and without the 1934 motto varieties....
This is a doubled-ear 1984 cent. I had one that had been certified MS64 Red by one of the minor services that I took to sell at an ANA convention...
XF40 is my guess.
AG2, and most dealers would pay you bullion value for it, if they wanted it at all.
Looks like an AU50 to me. What's it worth? If it's a common date, then it's not worth the cost of certification.
XF on both.
XF-AU.
Slabs are good housing for long-term storage. In addition, if you have something graded in a slab (NGC, PCGS, ANACS), then it'll be harder for...
Some of the ugliest toning ever. Why would you want it?
You should always buy the coin, not the holder. The early PCI graders were often quite conservative. A 1931-S Lincoln that early PCI graded AU58...
I think 63. Good luck in selling it at whatever grade is on the ICG holder. A guy at SilverTowne told me that ICG stands for I Can't Grade.
In an ICG holder, good luck in selling it as MS64.
I would send the picture of the coin in the holder to PCGS and ask them why it's not in the database.
Yes, the pictures are terrible, but at least there are a lot of them!
Very interesting tribute to a long life well-lived. Best wishes to you and yours as you celebrate your father's life.
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