I think the "king" needs to rethink the characteristics of an actual "doubled die" coin as the above shows no doubling whatsoever.
Uhhhh...........buy a house. Buy a Ferrari? Buy a Lamborghini? Buy pretty much anything you wanted.
Or the fact that of those 20,000 - one hundred of them have 5 or more examples.
Detecto is wrong about a LOT of things simply because he's young and looks at the world through a young mans eyes. He just does not understand...
Great! There's a forum just for you right her: http://www.cointalk.com/forums/world-coins/
The price on that coin is a bit "optimistic"! I'd pass and wait for one of the other 41 to come up for auction.
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No way the coin has silver in the center. All you have is a slightly heavy CnClad coin with machine doubling on it. Heavy coins happen. Just...
I like them all! :)
My bad.
Condition of the die should not affect the grade.
The coin is definitely a worn out example of the 74-D DDO Kennedy! Congrats! Nothing beats the satisfaction of finding a coin that's actually a...
I knew that. I just didn't want this to float off the page! ;^)
Well, according to specific metal prices, that puppy is worth at least 10 cents in nickel/copper metal content!
I only ask because the term has been misused and abused in recent online coin stories. I'm curious as to what other denomination coin this one...
Why are you saying its a mule?
Can you make money being a coin collector? Of course you can. However you'll usually not make as much as you spent.
Folks, an "investment" is something which will pay for itself over the "long run". Coin "investments" are really tough to find and generally...
True. However, I recall when the 2001 Proof Sets were selling for over $120 each! Today, they're back down to $20 and not even attracting bids at...
With that degree of offset, yes. However, those coins with larger degrees of offset can bring some premiums. I've seen them with as much as 5% offset.
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