Me, too.....with my good old Garrett.;)
Wow:woot:
Sorry for the lousy pics:rolleyes: [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
Low mintage issue and nice for the grade plus I like pre 1918 gold coins most. [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
The label is right, it means the year x of his "regency"
I think it's harmless. Black dirt which falls apart over the time. And no, PCGS will not change the slab without beeing payed for their job.
The 14S seems to be an AU58 coin. The Phili coin is not recommended to hold.
62 is my guess...we will see.
That' s a MS62 all day long.
That's a real one for sure;)
@Alexthegreat Hi Alex, mir gefaellt die Muenze gut. Sollte mindestens ne MS63 sein. Nahe Goldpreis bis max. 800- Euro kannst du die kaufen....
AU58
Ok, I thought we are talking about a new Overton or Sheldon variety or a 200 year old coin in MS69 condition...... But talking about good old abe...
Common Roosevelt Dimes, even in the mid MS condition can be bought around silver melt. That's a bargain.....
All of the mid 20th century series suffer from less demand. Franklins, Washingtons and Roosies...... That's sad.:(
Thanks guys, these pics are awful indeed. They create a washout look. I try better......
That's my newest aquisition. I see a medium worn coin with original surfaces and no signs of cleaning, but honest wear. I assume VF20. What's your...
I believe in progress in making the dies and the way they were prepared. The "machines" stayed the same in these 20 years.
I agree with the Large Date variety.
I say no cleaning, but light circulation. So AU55/58.
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