I'll supply answers tomorrow after others have had a chance to offer their thoughts.
The coin really has AU details in my opinion. But the more significant factor is that it appears to have been polished many years ago. This makes...
It was becauae they did not want the Indian coinage circulating in Great Britain.
Benefits vary at any workplace. But pretty much any large corporation has benefit packages that match, and sometimes exceed, what govt. offers....
If you don't store them properly, then yes the coins could turn black. But if stored properly, in a closed container with controlled temperature...
OK, I'm gonna give ya all one more shot at this. Then after we get a few answers I'll provide the right answers. And understand, I'm picking coins...
Yeah, they make them for collectors, but not because they have to. The way the law reads they only have to make them if the Federal Reserve orders...
It certainly could, it depends on your storage methods.
OK - here's a test for ya. And this should show you all several different things that I constantly repeat here on the forum. I will post pics...
The Morgan - low AU with an old polishing The Walker - can't really see it well enough to tell if there is wear or not. It could be AU, could...
No. But the Karause catalog list pretty much every coin there is issued by every country going back to 1600.
All government employees are paid based on a predetermined schedule established by law. And that schedule is much less than what is paid in the...
There are some few examples known of '65 & '66 90% silver halfs, and 90% silver quarters. But they are few and far between and considered to be...
Sure they can, and have already. The mint stopped producing half dollars for circulation after 2001.
Those that do - aint tellin ;)
Well, before anyone can understand the difference in prices between grades, they first have to understand the difference in prices within a single...
The first is probably Austrian, but issued by a nobleman or bishop instead of the king. The second I believe is from Charles V, Netherlands as...
Oh I don't dispute that. But what sets the new ANACS apart is the degree to which their standards changed. Coins pretty much across the board...
Alert the media ! I agree with PCGS :eek:
If that is a planchet flaw just below the jaw line then I'd say 64, and I'm going to assume they said it was. If it isn't - 62.
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