If they seemed that big, you'd probably had too many.
My best friend in college was a caver; he introduced me to the club, which had more than its share of cool people, and took me into a...
Yep. Same issue.
It's not just you, it's a known issue. Peter's aware of it, but I'm guessing the fix is turning out to be complicated.
I'm afraid I'm too upset now to discuss it.
Do you suppose he counterstamps them while they're resting on a reverse die?
I don't often cover a wall with what I imagine to be math symbols, but when I do, I always throw in some organic chemistry diagrams. And I get...
Well, the outside layers of clad coins are exactly the same composition as the five-cent piece, but the interior is just copper. So, a five-cent...
Short answer: tradition, otherwise known as inertia. :rolleyes: Long answer: see preceding posts.
Guess this will be another branch of the grand "accelerating toning with hand sanitizer" experiment... :troll:
I think that depends a lot on what "good" means to you. "Likely to go up in value" (answer: I have no idea)? "Visually interesting" (definitely a...
I think the problem is that they do mix. Or at least "blend".
Could you elaborate on what you mean by "legal standard"?
Bookmarked to check later... ;)
We're glad you're here! Hang in there -- the new normal is likely to be different, but it will get better.
I guess technically I'm doing the same thing, but "all" the Canadian nickels I get in change still constitutes "zero". :( With the exchange rate,...
Wow. I'll be waiting to hear more news about this. I'm glad your coins are accounted for, and I hope SEGS can recover.
And this would be news? ;) And that's how you become a wealthy hoarder.
It seems like I've seen an awful lot of AG3 or FR2 1916-D dimes in G04 or G06 slabs.
One quick correction: it's 25% of the outer layers of clad coins, 8% of the coin's total weight. The balance is copper, also pricey, but a good...
Separate names with a comma.