What problem? Only problem I see is that I still don't have such an extensive collection. Put some in an album, and the FBL ones in plastic holders.
It looks good for a century of circulation- someone must have put it aside for a prolonged time period.
That is against regulations, and you should report it if your area is at risk of mail theft, like @masterswimmer said. Eh, in the Bay Area,...
Unfortunately, I can't tell you for sure what the other coin you have is. My guess is- it's an ancient Wen Zong Chinese "Cash" from the 1850s.
One of your top coins looks like a Thai Baht.
In case you think it might be fake, it has a mintage of 72,000,000, so I highly doubt it would be forged.
What strikes you about it? Looks normal to me.
Kind of like that- it's hard to find series years of 5 dollar notes from before 1995. I try to fill up an album with $1, $5, $10 and $20 notes...
Thank you to everyone who replied to my previous thread and offered advice on how to straighten out my 1985 $5 note: [ATTACH] Here it is now-...
[ATTACH] [ATTACH] Damagus Dramaticus Centus 1984 C.E; Lincoln I
Probably a novelty piece. No extra value, even though it may have been sold at a premium.
No, not worth grading. The 1983 Mint Sets are the rare object for that year. 1983 proof sets, however, aren't worth that much. There are some...
Lafayette, CA, but I work in SF. (San Francisco might have the lowest prob. of finding one with it's population of 1,000,000 people.)
Looks like they were struck in SF. Although they do exist, they are apparently of a very low mintage, and thus very valuable....
You have a United Arab Emirates Dirham (worth approx. a quarter), and a Vietnamese Dong (worth approx. $1 on ebay). I also happen to have a UAE...
It seems that the earliest Accugrade slabs from the 1980s are worth a premium (the ones that included a photo of the coin graded).[IMG] Here's a...
I'd give $30. Possibly not forged, but, I agree with @Collecting Nut- definitely not worth $225.
When a note is in circulation, there are a lot of opportunities for it's recipients to stamp it. Typically, bank tellers, moneychangers in foreign...
That is definitely post mint damage. Your coin has been punctured with something, although, I cannot think of an exact method used to deface it.
Where do you see the doubling? Looks like a normal coin.
Separate names with a comma.