Does this actually happen? I was thinking of putting in a bid on the coin in the $30-$40 range based upon the *hope* that it was a photo imaging...
Glad to have new mods... not going to congratulate them... but... congratulations Peter on tricking two more people to be mods!
http://www.ebay.com/itm/380617157442 I'm wondering how that got MS-64 with all of the marks EVERYWHERE on the obverse and reverse.
Sold.
No one seems to have any interest in these, so I'm going to sell them to Provident.
I bought an MS-64 Morgan from them once. When it arrived, there was heavy cheek rub (looked thumbed), so I returned it. They wrote me a nasty...
Basically, the black market. My understanding is they have (or at least had) escrow exchange services a year or two ago. Beyond that, folks use...
My guess is 62. I wouldn't even say 62+, as I've concluded that the plus is used only for eye appeal... And since the gouge is bringing it down to...
Gold should be softer, even at 22k, than silver. After all, the Gold Eagles only contain other metals for the sake of coining. But, why would you...
Medora, maybe you should have told your nephew to sell 95% (80% is the typical number) of his position. Then tell him, he can use the proceeds to...
Selling these for spot plus the cost of Registered Mail.[ATTACH] I accept Postal Money orders as payment. 1980 American Arts gold medallions....
Three 1980 3-medallion styrofoam sleeves of 1980 Grant Wood (red label: 1-troy ounce gold & 1/9-troy ounce copper per medallion), issued by the US...
Rub on hair, cheek looks smoothed (thumbed?). I would say AU55/58.
I'm actually REALLY ****ed about this. If I get a PF70 now, will PCGS insist that I pay them 1% of $86k to get my coin back?
Most of those places sell 1 ounce copper for $1+. Given that Cu isn't bullion (not measured in troy weights), you're expecting to pay $16+ per...
Other photos [ATTACH][ATTACH]
Three 1980 3-medallion styrofoam sleeves of 1980 Grant Wood 1-troy ounce gold & 1/9-troy ounce copper, issued by the US Mint Three 1980...
At least he fixed the listing. It says clad now. Though it still says PR70...
Congratulations on that accomplishment! That's actually very impressive since the Mint had some random commems stuck in there in the early 90s.
Given the surfaces represented in the first images, that coin might not even be graded... it'd come back in a details type of slab, at best.
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