It is a woody. That is the poorly mixed alloy. Nothing to do with cleaning.
63 with luck it might go 64. I cannot tell if that is brown or red-brown.
Some one ought to tell PCGS that there clock is goofy. It says you posted it tomorrow. (Well, 6 hours from now.)
Just like coins, it will dissolve grease/oil. i.e. large quantities with longer exposure will defat your skin. Fingers will have next to no...
The only reason 24 hour soak in acetone might be bad would be acetone forms an acid with prolonged exposure to air. However, you use the acetone...
Would that be when you miss the urinal? I guess that would be peefoul. But the bird is peafowl.
In 66 red, is is more common than the 1912, 1913, and 1914. I guess "rare" is a matter of perspective.
Real the last I heard. See https://www.cointalk.com/threads/1909-matte-proof-%E2%80%93-new-coin-die-discovered.103589/
It is damaged.
Without a picture, no one can tell you anything.
Vendors pics. I hope it really looks like that. [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
Apparently nice ones aren't that rare. [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
I use my Dremel - medium speed (6 of 10) but I use a muslin wheel with headlight polish. I have only "burnt" a couple of several hundred slabs I...
64
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Because they cannot prove the authenticity of a single (I am sure there are more out there) coin does not prove anything about his method. On top...
Here is the die chip enlarged. I cannot tell if that chip is in there along with something else or someone did a job trying to imitate it. [ATTACH]
1915 "Due to its lower that usual mintage for a P-mint cent, this issue has long enjoyed a premium. It was one of only 11 dates values at over...
Interesting. I wonder what they were looking for but could not find. Everything I see appears to be authentic.
And I paid $130 for an NGC MS66. Granted, it was not the nicest 66 I have, but still.
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