P.S: If you are uncertain about its grade, I wouldn't have it graded. 1890 is a fairly common date, and not worth the cost to get it certified...
I think a tpg would go MS65, because the cheek is extraordinarily clean. The chatter in the fields would hold it back from a 66. In the video...
Happens all the time with US coins. The die probably struck the coin a tiny bit off center, which caused the struck portion to be at an angle....
It was struck like that. A typical New Orleans weak strike. There is still full luster evident over the hair on the ear, and that means it is not...
65-66, if it doesn't get a details slab
45
PF-65, no higher because of the toning
He means bag abrasion; silver is a weak metal, but the US mints nevertheless shipped them on bumpy roads in 1000 coin bags. The highest points...
Did it spot in the holder? The early NGC would probably never give a 66 to that coin if they knew it had those spots.
Well, according to Q. David Bowers, early San Francisco mint cents (1900s-early 1910s) came out of the mint like that. The metal used was more...
PF-64+/65
Haven't been here in a while. Pf-66 Cam.
Hh, fr a 9h graer, he hs prety bad spellig.:rolleyes:
It seems that all services do that.
I feel that none of the grading services are perfect, and that NGC should really not be the 2nd most popular grading service, as they make...
I SUPPOSE it's copper spotting and contact marks
Cool, but could we have weight please?
That sounds like you're calling him a noob. :mouth: I know what you mean though.:D All is well.
What's the mintmark?
I feel that Morgans are graded much more leniently than other series, maybe by 2-3 points. Am I right? Just curious.
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