Having it in a slab from a major TPG will go a long way in maximizing your profit.
It's a circulated 1983 D one cent. A little heavy, but within tolerance. Maybe your scale needs calibration? Any other questions?
They don't. That's why they call it 'phishing'. Put out thousands, millions of emails (chum), someone will bite.
Maybe Rascal will stop by to give his opinion of authenticity and value. (7 million dollars?)
Double post
The 1943 steel cents planchets were cut from a strip of steel that had already been zinc plated. An original 1943 cent should show no sign of the...
It's rusted, heavily scratched/gouged and has very obviously been replated. GTG? Don't make me laugh.
Have you tried looking a NGC and PCGS population reports? They're easy to find and easy to use.
The first to put up the cash gets the goods. You can't pay now? If the item is gone when you have the money, too bad.
No, but I haven't looked for them in a while.
Two words: Change banks! Two better words: Credit union!
I guarantee it's been opened. Someone has definitely peeked. The mint sent these out unsealed.
Uh . . . what?
"plachetted"?
Every day you'll find many people on the beaches with metal detectors, even more people after storms. Small treasures wash up onto the beaches...
Yup, looks like a train wheel. Not minted that way. Not a dryer coin. Someone, for reasons unknowable, took the time to alter that quarter.
It looks to me like the coin itself is splitting. It's not from a cracked die.
Plating blister. Not an error.
Yes, it's real. Did you really need two threads for this piece of crap?
Now I have to clean my keyboard and screen. Thanks a lot, Steve!
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