Welcome to the forum. If you could post pictures of your coin, it would be a big help. It is hard to ID coins without them. Charlie
That is awesome, Dcarr.:thumb: Charlie
That looks like it was reprocessed. Charlie
LOL:p I got one of those in change once. Charlie
Yes, I knew they were fake when I bought them. They were only a couple bucks each. The guy selling them had about 20 different counterfeits...
The 1894-O could be worth slabing if it is in a high grade. If you can post a pic, we should be able to tell. Charlie
There are a lot of "replicas" of Pine Tree shillings, so odds are that yours is one. It looks like a cast copy, IMHO. It could possibly be real...
It looks like a fake Pine Tree shilling. Charlie
They sell for around $75-$80 on Ebay. Charlie
Some people consider that "cleaning" and others don't. Charlie
I think NCS will only slab coins that have been sent to them for conservation. If you send coins to NGC that are damaged they will still get...
An example might be a coin with PVC contamination. If the PVC has pitted the surface of the coin, it would be put in an NCS slab after the PVC...
The NCS slab is for "Damaged" coins. Coins that are "conserved" by NCS that are not "Damaged" are put in NGC slabs. Charlie
I use www.apmex.com They list their buy and sell prices. Charlie
Silver clad half dollars are 40% silver half dollars that were minted from 1965 through 1970. Charlie
I'm not a darksider, but I think it is a Russian gold five roubles. Charlie
I have one of the fake Trade dollars from China. The 1921 Morgan seems to be made of a different metal than the Trade dollar. Charlie
It is a die chip. They are pretty common, but they are fun to find. Charlie
I picked up these two duds at the coin show yesterday. The first one is a 1921 Morgan dollar. At a glance it looks real, but if you look...
Welcome to the forum. Your coins probably have the "D"(Denver) mintmark on them. The ones made at the Philadelphia mint did not have a mintmark...
Separate names with a comma.