As was pointed out to me there are also regular S mints ( business strikes) That are not proofs.
Spend it quickly before the value of these zinc cents drop below 0.01.
There is an S mint that is a proof, so someone took it out of a set and spent it. There is also an S mint that is a silver proof. Which would have...
There are many great ones. [ATTACH]
The obverse is nice, but the reverse is fried and makes it details.
If you eat the cost, then they have gotten away with it by selling to you.
$3 for the Canadian nickel and $5 each for the dimes. I also love the old 19th century coppers. Good value there too, as well as cool looking designs.
There is a finite number of silver coins in circulation. That number can not go up except when coins are stolen and spent at face value. Everyone...
This is a small. I believe the "D" in God is one of the markers. [ATTACH]
I would guess modern. I doubt they were faking these 100 years ago. These are 20 and 30 dollar coins now, may not have been worth very much to put...
Many of the merc's appear to have been cleaned.
There are a number of nicks on both sides. It would have to show wear to be AU 58? Maybe this should be 60 or 61.
A good trade is one where both parties are happy with the transaction.
$100,000 would be a minimum bid, since it is MS 62 Brown $250,000- $325,000 before exorbitant buyers premium auction fraud scam.
Read here the other day that old halves stayed in banks and were not circulated. Which may account for the high grade. Some of these were...
Get a better scale.
What if you take it out of the holder, and then discover it's not genuine?
Try clicking on FULL size after uploading the photo and before clicking post.
They could have been contracted to steal this, and they didn't melt it, they just handed it over and took their cut.
Looks almost the right size, just thinner and worn. 7/10 of a gram. That's a lot of copper (ions?)/ atoms.
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