G6.
Why do people always get that mixed up ? Grey Sheet is for raw or slabbed - sight seen. Blue Sheet is for slabbed only - sight unseen.
Not at all Mike. What the mint feels is more important is getting all the stories out of the newspapers. Squeaky wheel gets the grease !
Not at all. Seems to be extremely efficient to me. The company is selling their product at a price they agree with. No, it isn't...
First of all, if a seller is offering coins at the prices listed in any of the above that you mentioned - you need to go look elsewhere because...
To my knowledge they will not do that on a fix the label error request. They will merely re-slab the coin with a corrected label at the same grade.
Here's the second two -
OK - this was inspired by Mark's recent thread. I'm going to post 4 coins. It will take 2 posts to get all the pics up so be patient before...
Hmmmm, first time I ever heard that. Burnished means polished, always has as far as I know.
I haven't been able to work in over a year and half Moen.
Precisely. So what do you do in that situation ? Answer seems pretty plain to me based on two things. 1 - the motto got on our money as the...
If you wish to discuss those things there are plenty of forums that do it on a daily basis. Go have at it.
OK, fine. Go get a law passed to put whatever you want on our coins. That's how the motto got there - so you do it.
It is because the point and purpose of the discussion is to debate the Constutionality of the motto. Not to discuss all the various relgious...
Why ? Because people don't trust in aliens Moen. They do trust in God.
I don't abdicate anything Moen. The Constitution itself plainly states - " The judicial Power shall extend to all Cases, in Law and Equity,...
Have you asked the seller if he is indeed selling the exact coin in the picture ? If he is, and you win, then I'd say you get the coin you want....
No such coin exist. A wise man once said something along these lines - it is only by studying the past that we can ever hope to have any...
Yes, the testoon was first issued in 1502, and again in 1544 under Henry VIII. And while its value was 12d, it was called a testoon - not a...
Forgot to mention something - shiilings were minted for the first time during the reign of Edward VI
Separate names with a comma.