64
Check the reverse for vertical die scratches left of the C and right of the T in CENT. This would be N-42, but would probably not be easily seen...
I don't have my stuff in front of me at the moment, but do we know that N-42 is a different die marriage? I thought I remember reading that it...
Just a bank promo worth face value. The SBA is not a wide rim. On a wide rim, the rim nearly touches the 1, such that if you drop two lines from...
If a current cent, weighing 2.5 grams is 2.5% copper by weight, then it contains .0625 grams of copper. The surface area if a cent (19.05mm...
Using the Grellman book, I'd sticker it as N-15. Date position is a match.
There's neither a premium nor a penalty when selling them as a set. If someone tries to lowball you for having to buy them all, decline and move on.
The "middle weight" (1/2 and 1/4 oz) gold eagles were never terribly popular. People wanted full ounces, which were the most cost-efficient way...
Some of the fractional pieces are worth premiums over melt, the 1987 1/2 ounce, in particular. If melt is $2490 per set, then $2650 for a 1987...
27. Not sure I see doubling on the ear in this picture, but the mint mark is in the right place. Also, there are very few 1881-O VAMs ANACS...
NNP only gets you stuff that can be legally scanned. Want a copy of Davenport's book on German Talers from 1500-1600? Two choices: Pony up...
8A
XF details. $45 is VF retail, so maybe a little high, but you like the coin, and at the end of the day, that's what matters.
I do a lot of series collecting. I find that doing so helps to hone one's knowledge of the series, which includes simply grading them, having a...
The 16 vs. 17 berries on the wreath is a difference in the reverse hub. The earlier reverse, which accounts for about 20-25% of the 1921-P...
This is an 11 year old thread. The coin posted back in 2006 is copper-nickel clad, as are all other known 1971-D halves except for the one cited...
Can I borrow four dollars?
That's all you needed to say. Don't bother.
But then it wouldn't be as recognizable as being Laura's.
I know. It's probably more an unfortunate choice than a bad one.
Separate names with a comma.