I don't see how that many lines, which appear so prominently in the original pictures, just "disappeared." There has to be an explanation.
I think this looks more like a small die chip than doubling. If you think it is doubling, it has to be a double of something. If you look around...
If that other one was a 65, then I'd have to guess at least 65+ on this one. The strike is better, and there are less marks. The luster appears...
So, is 83P considered the "key date" for clad Washingtons? With a mintage of 673 million, why is this one considered "scarce"?
I'd probably call yours EF-45, with a shot at AU. I don't see much luster, which is going to keep it from AU.
I don't see it on this one, but its possible. Go to the Wexler website, he has them all listed. If you can find a match, let us know which one.
Doubled dies on these single-squeeze hubbed state quarters generally have a very different appearance than the classic double-squeeze dies that...
Looks more like solder than glue. Soaking it won't have any affect at all. The problem is, once you remove that stuff the areas that were...
Yup, that is a high grade piece of bullion. Nearly impossible to tell the difference between a 69 or 70, especially with blurry pictures.
You don't see it very often with US coins, but if you talk to some of the ancients collectors, they'll tell stories about coins breaking. The...
Don't need any more evidence than that. Thanks. Definitely not a dot cent.
Unfortunately, this is a prime example of when coin "collecting" is absolutely *NOT* an investment. Buying overpriced, common, low value coins...
@coinzip , are these coins all yours? There seems to be an unusually high concentration of suspect coins in this list. Can you provide us more...
Says its a "50th Anniversary Set". 50th Anniversary of what?
And this is the heart of why some people have trouble calling it an investment. To me, the "profit" doesn't even start until inflation is...
Well that seems quite emphatic. Care to elaborate?
So, Mike, what did this one grade? Don't keep us in suspense!
I wonder if @justafarmer could help the OP out with this one?
4, 5, and 7 are the ones that I immediately identified as counterfeits. 1, 6, 9, 12, and 15 are also all suspicious. A couple of those may in...
The problem is trying to find nice coins in ANACS slabs, because a lot of people do this. The nice ones get picked fairly quickly.
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