I don't have pictures of all the 1795's here with me, but this works for all the ones I've compared so far. On the 1794 the terminal leaves of...
Solder is what I'm thinking.
It's purple!
I can't tell what if anything is going on with that coin, but it doesn't really look anything like the original coin.
Grease strikethrough
That's correct.
Planchet problem. Rough surface from worn rollers. If you blow up the pictures you can see the lines go all the way across the coin but most of...
I suspect on the labels they got a batch in that were slightly oversized and they don't quite fit in the recess they are supposed to. (different...
It is in a bezel, You can see the damaged edge of the bezel at 6:30 on the reverse.
And that works out to one out of every ten thousand bags, or twenty thousand boxes.
Now that is truly superior customer service. Very refreshing to hear.
Good thinking, a very nice S-8 Low R-3.
I'm not sure but I believe he meant what is the difference between a sample slab and a regular production slab.
I'd buy it in a heartbeat.
All three are wide.
It's sounding better and better, but I'm not sure where the planchet would have come from.. I checked and no magnetic planchets were used for any...
Looks like a 1798. Appears to be a type 2 hair which means 1798 or 1799 and the Liberty is too close to the head to be a 99.
If it sticks strongly to the magnet (jumps to it) then you have something. If it just barely sticks to it or you can tell there is some...
But if the dip doesn't remove the stain completely, then you have a cleaned AND stained dollar.
They are carried on the books as an asset at $1 each. Melting them down would represent a loss to the government of 94 cents for each one melted....
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