As I said you only mark 1 in 100 as a sample to see what comes back, and with something benign and washable so as not to damage the coin. I don't...
[ATTACH] That's when you see an image, like a cloud that is shaped like an animal, it's not really there but you see it. Here is a picture of a...
This is incorrect logic. There actually is a standard for low serial number and it is 00000100 or lower. To a lesser degree 00000999 and lower....
Coins get smacked around a lot and the metal can move. It may be a die chip as some posters have said. But I often find filled in D's just from...
There's nothing there. I don't doubt that you are able to see a D but it's probably not from a mint mark. Since the coin is other wise in pretty...
71 seems undergraded. VF-20 I think, and the other one everyone was spot on. I may be at XF-40, but I am tight.
This is why I said most coins, as some foreign coins have medal alignment.
Most coins the reverse is upside down from the obverse. But on "medal" orientation both sides are the same. A US coin that has the same...
25 cents. I see some clown on You Tube with a microscope proclaiming he is finding new varieties of doubling on every single new dime and quarter...
Die crack is cool. No doubling. The doubling is usually only going to be found on known dates/ denominations. And true doubled die doubling is...
I wouldn't even pay $1. This is a common coin. Lighting makes it difficult. It might be AU. High retail book value does say $9, but I believe...
If you like the coin, (I have some like this that I have found) put it in a 2x2 and save it. Is it worth anything? No. There's almost no reason to...
Nothing. $20 same as in town.
Coin Star is a private company. You can't buy or lease a machine.
The D is undergraded. Although the reverse photo is blurry.
Well there have been a few late 80's and early 90's that were found to be on copper planchets (all at Denver). You can't take anything out of the...
You have to weigh all the 1983 cents in case you have a transitional off metal error.
I just felt you could tell them you are losing business and they are 100% wrong.
2.8 is not right. 2.5 for zinc, 3.1 for copper and I believe 2.7 for steel. There are some slight variations but if the scale is correct it...
Generally foreign coins will never have the same weight and dimensions as US coins. Except for the Bahamas and Panama.
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