After living in TN. I completely agree new coins will turn over night. The Mntn west doesn't have that affect. I have a glass jar that I have been...
Great Title, and Yes it is.
I am a new user, and absolutely impressed. I thought that was the process, a soak in distilled water should be the last process to any restoration...
What would you grade them?
The lower photo has vertical polishing on both sides. Thats not circulation.
These 58's came out of wheat rolls that I stashed years ago. And now residing in a library of coins Album.
Coppercoins also has their examples, die stages will change with the deterioration, matching exactly also means that the coin can have attributes...
I wonder why there were two that said details/cleaned. I would either suspect that they saw the crud left over above ST, or they saw the coins...
I agree with die deterioration. The L of Liberty is most likely a gas bubble.
The bigger error is the large die crack on Lincolns head. Also what makes a clash worth a premium is evidence of a date on the reverse. Have you...
It's possible that it could garner a little extra money, Grease filled dies are common and it would take a couple buyers really wanting it to make...
Haven't even looked yet. LOL
I am not looking to slab them I just wanted everyone's opinion. Because they were just treated with Verdicare.
I am at 280,000
Would you expect these to get a details cleaned grade, or would they strait grade? [ATTACH] [ATTACH] [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
I hope that some others that know these to chime in. I don't know what the weight should be in reference to the OP's. Also was this clipped...
It's been clipped a few times. But nice looking Cob.
Fill us in @Mark68 what is whatnot?
Good work Lou, probably just a later die stage.
A new one for the Cuba collection, and another for the foreign coins struck in US. This one was struck in Philadelphia. [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
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