You might suggest it to them. I could see them possibly being willing to accept an upfront fee of 25 to 30 times the annual membership fee (the...
True, but back then they didn't have a printed price guide. The their price guide came along..........and THEN they ignore it when they came up...
Well these are plated steel (that's what the P means) so with a break in the plating it could just be corrosion under the plating.
What I'm seeing looks like glue. Even if it was heat related it would have to be something that happened post strike making it Post Strike Damage...
Concrete sidewalk.
Yeah but you might find it in a roll of half dollars. I have seen them put an ancient roman coin in the end of the roll. Sure like that showed...
No hadn't see it. I have to get ready for work shortly so I will try and look at it more closely later.
The cladding isn't the result of a "dip", they are three layers of metal that are bonded together by high pressure rolling. (In the early years...
The problem with that explanation is what would cause a RAISED lump in the strip that could survive multiple passes through the multi-ton pressure...
One problem I see is that someone bought the coin you received expecting to get it and now isn't going to.
The 1803 is a small date small fraction, I believe S-254. And as C-B-D says the 1814 is a plain 4. They only had to rev dies that year the plain...
This will also frequently be the appearance of a lightly circulated coin that has begun to tone. Because what caused the wear (and left...
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