Oh well...i'm guessing ANACS would still take it...but why do you want it slabbed anyway ?
Just wondering what was the range of collectors pursuing the different fields...JLS
The coin looks fine, just a bit roughed up from being shaken up and down in a purse with lots of other coins. As already mentioned, 99.6% of 44600...
Wow...the D appears to be over something....
The best idea...would be to stop slabs full stop. And make it an offence to own a recent (post 1950s) fake of a coin. Then we won't have to bother...
Wow...that is a very big safe...
Very nice choice coin ! If only there were lots of those about in that grade...
Pretty worthless in that grade, I'm afraid.
That is amazing ! Normal coin gets struck, then somehow goes back to stage 1. It gets offstruck with a brockage die.....
I would have to agree that the lustre looks way more like polish. I am a bit suspicious...
They are scarce, but Indian coins are not priced high, so $40 is way higher than most would go. Oh well...just hope you get half of that back..
The ones made out of gilt brass with the good old days inscription can be bought in the tons. I bought a kilo of them for £20
LOL ! Great !!! Way to go !
Very unusual !
That is a late victorian/edwardian imitation of a gold guinea of George III.It carries an advert. I would say it dates from the 1880s to the...
I hate coins which arn't fully toned....especially ones with splotchy lustre...
Polished XF, net F-VF....
I don't keep my rather valuable coin collection in a safe, for the reason that just no-one would beable to take it. They would be more interested...
Yes...rather nasty that someone has paid $25 for that one though. Certainly done with some sort of very high power flame torch...
I think you will find less forgeries in GEC slabs, but the grading will be just as appalling.
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