Your being a coin collector and all, I'd say you got the cart before the horse!
That's an eagle, not a half eagle, and it looks perfectly genuine from here.
Heh, heh . . . and we thought we'd pulled the wool over your eyes. .
Overlooking the appearance at the high points, to which stacking friction can be attributed, I still see wear between the two right-most sets of...
If the seller doesn't cancel the transaction, yes. My guess is that's how eBay eventually puts a lid on shill bidding . . . being deprived of...
65 . . . love the toning, but the strike is a bit soft, although normal for the date. If stronger I'd have guessed 66.
I think it's a gorgeously toned AU58 that found its way into a 64 holder . . .
First off, understand that you are not necessarily missing out on coins due to shill bidding. You may not be bidding enough, possibly even for a...
Yeah, I don't know if I could buy a more cool example of a strike through grease.
okay, just for fun, I had to buy this . . ....
Awesome color!
Nice coin . . . don't worry about the tarnish. In this case it doesn't affect either the grade or the value of the coin.
Looks right to me, but the jury's out until NGC gives the word.
Okay, here's a stretch . . . Indian cent struck on Barber dime planchet blanked from cent stock.
Nice coin Larry.
I believe you are referring to die erosion . . . if it is, you should see similar lines running radially from the stars to the rim as well.
Don't mess with success.
I ran both of those possibilities through my mind, and neither explains what I see.
I do not see what I'm looking for in your images, but maybe you can see it in person. Is there any frost-fade in the depression?
Stumped, I am . . .
Separate names with a comma.