I use one of these to eliminate that particular postprocessing hassle for raw coins: [ATTACH] Good ones are dimensionally-accurate enough to...
Then how was it strong enough to create a sharp outline at its' thinnest part? C'mon, man. This doesn't pass the smell test.
Not at all. I just don't usually shop with a cart to wheel those references around in. You can shop by whatever standard you want. Me, I won't be...
Then why didn't it fill the devices on the die?
Any one which wants to do business with me does.
Then what's your theory, or are you just here to be argumentative? If I weren't willing to listen, I'd have walked away. I've helped you here...
That's it. They can appear "normal" or mirror-image if they happen to rotate before being struck through.
At a total price of $9 I couldn't blame you for not leaving it. :)
I can't think of any way to keep the second planchet so perfectly centered when the collar doesn't stick up far enough to contain more than one....
A dropped device, by nature, would (at least partially) fill the devices on the die it was struck into.... There are aspects of this anomaly...
Um, you have to find the custom-cut acrylic in the mirror. :P Acrylic wants to be scored rather than drilled; I've found best success using a...
Y'know, I'm finding increasing numbers of reasons to buy a drill press. Just not sure where to put it in one room. :) And drilling acrylic...
I was under the understanding that NaCl completely dissolves - it literally gets rendered asunder molecularly - in water. Always wondered why it...
It's the first coinage issued after the Queen's coronation, and has legends unique to the issue. One-year type.
An unknown die crack is just that - an unknown die crack. Does not at all mean it's an unknown variety. It is more likely to be a crack currently...
1953 9-coin Coronation Set. You didn't throw your money away; that number is rough current retail in Pounds Sterling, not dollars. Keep it...
ROFL. OK, question: Why does salt dissolved in water still taste salty?
Well, you know 1921's now - no guarantee an attribution is possible. I just gotta try. :)
To me, as a (literally, it's hardwired) obsessive practitioner of the dark art, the idea of suspending a coin in a baking soda solution is rather...
I hate it when you don't give me larger pics of the other side. :P Looks like a rim/collar cud topleft of the obverse, by LU.
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