You sold an item that you did not have valid title to or which you could not pass on a valid title to. Therefor there was no legal sale and the...
When the contractors wrap the coins there can be some older coins already in the hopper, and it is possible to have older coins dumped into the...
The second and third pieces are definitely NOT real. I have serious doubts about the silver round.
No it is not. Most of the 1944 Hennings are from this die and a few of the others as well, but a few 1944 Hennings and most of the other dates...
Typically when you see a slab labeled Brilliant Uncirculated it is because of a bulk submission with a minimum grade stipulation. Someone send in...
I'd say if is probably fake. The denticals are bad, the surfaces are porous, and reverse details are mushy and indistict.
Well since the only thing you can tell about a roll is what the coins on the end are (If the obverses are showing, and for cents through halves...
It might be silver but it is NOT an ASE and is not from the US government.
Then the bad news is discovered that the bank declared the box abandoned ten years ago and turned the contents over to the state. :)
The only way to really know if it is brass requires some high end equipent that bombards it with xrays and then analyses the x-rays readmited by...
OK here is the the actual interm regulation and the changes made to create the final regulation. The section you specifically wanted to know...
Hand punching of mintmarks on proof dies ended in 1985. After that they started phasing them out on the business strike coins/denominations....
As a general rule, No they don't hold their value. After a few years their values drop considerably. But once they do stop falling they tend to...
The DE quarter is known for this particular grease fill error. The CT for the middle of "charter oak" missing due to grease, the NH for the...
Most likely just discolored. If it was truly missing the clad layers it would be significanly underweight, and the strike would also be weak due...
Because there ARE so many of them. Sure many collectors like the nice worn coin, but there are MANY MANY MANY more "nice worn coins" than there...
The last one looks like it could be struck on a tapered thin planchet.
Photocopy one. True, that's just pure greed. Actually you don't have to. They will slab it even if you don't have the number.
NGC didn't start doing the photos and linking them to the certificate number in the verification site until sometime in 2009, long after the SS...
He asked about the 1955 double mint sets not the proof sets. The 1955 mint sets came in the same type of holder as the 1958 shown in this thread....
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