...I'm not seeing it? And I'm a little afraid that if I do see it, I won't be able to unsee it.
"Mid-circulated" Barber halves and Walkers from before the 1920s are generally around G. Most of those coins worked hard for a long time.
For coins, you only have to worry about eye appeal. For people, you've got to trade off against nose appeal.
So, apply enough heat and pressure, and we'll see you shine like a diamond?
Ah, my bad. When you said "7.5% premium" for the fractionals, I thought you meant they were selling for 7.5% over spot, not that the spread was...
Well, if salt and vinegar did produce toxic fumes, I'm pretty sure I'd have died of ketchup exposure sometime in my teens. ;)
A better man than me would let that go by unremarked. In fact, I'm sure several already have.
The full quote: In context, it seems pretty clear that he means "invested millions of dollars" over the years they've been building out the...
I don't think so. Are you thinking about vinegar and bleach, maybe?
As long as it's only on coins that are already ruined, because it will ruin them further. In this context, lemon juice and vinegar serve the...
Or you could, you know, put some double-sided tape on the magnet. Shouldn't we be spending less time figuring out how new posters might be trying...
Trouble-maker. And I mean that in the very best way.
Those fractionals can carry a premium on buyback, too. But there's generally a fixed component to transaction cost, so the smaller the amount...
I'll defer to your actual experience, but I'd expect a pressed Zincoln to foam up like a rabid dog if you dipped it in lemon juice and salt....
Religious discussion, reported. ;)
The comparison was with the S&P 500, not the Finn 1 (or 4). Look, I'll confess. I bought New Century Mortgage in 2006 or 2007 when it was...
Bite your tongue. :eek:
By buying them from people who bought them from the Mint, of course. You haven't bought it until you've paid. Would you rather the Mint reserve...
Um... 1) E-Z-Est is different, because it's got thiourea in addition to the acid. It acts specifically on the silver sulfide that forms tarnish,...
I remember getting the same response from a dealer at a coin show one time (the "acetone is too harsh" part). I assumed he misheard me, and...
Separate names with a comma.