If I buy a large collection of British or mixed coins, I usually push all the modern commemoratives aside or only count their metal value if any....
1887 coins in this grade are usually found in 1887 Jubilee sets. This makes 1887 a very common year for good EF to UNC Victoria silver. Because it...
I'd grade that as Fine. Books summary is spot on.
Minor production flaws are really only a US based interest, basically, if you need a loupe to see it it's not worth bothering with If I remember...
Grading is firstly an estimate of the amount of wear on a coin. Other factors are involved like damage and original mint lustre, etc. but forget...
I'd call that one (1950, by the way, not 1960) EF, there is a trace of wear to the high poiints but it would go in a mixed bag of foreign minors...
The grading of coins does not depend on where they come from. It is just a matter of how worn they are. Same as US coins. The main difference is...
Just a little more contrast would improve your pictures. [ATTACH]
No.
The poster may have meant integral a delta v, rate of change of velocity But I still don't get it. If the force producing the acceleration was...
A more likely figure I read was 1% of pound coins are fakes. They buy so little that few people look at them. I know I don't.
Only if you can provide a video of it actually walking the dog. Otherwise maybe a 10c. curio in that state
The British coin is a 2d, not a 2P. The abbreviation 'd' for pence was used up to decimalisation, with L.S.D. used for Pounds, shillings and...
The dynastic year is 1327, the regnal years are the differing ones to add to the year the reign started to get the dates.
Nail a sheepskin to a board and shovel gravel to wash through it, you can shift far more dirt. When you get fed up or the skin has so much gold...
I think you have read the regnal year below the toughra correctly
I'd say it depends on the note, some are common or only found unissued, others would be a surprising find unissued. I don't think any general rule...
That must be a pretty early relic for America, then. It does look a bit too round for hammered. Some sort of early Spanish or Portugese copper?
Given the age of the piece I think it quite possible the poster does not have an American dime :) Well, not a new one anyway :-) All I can say...
It may be the 'unsearched roll factor', few but the gullible will pay for a roll of anything wrapped, they will only pay a decent price if they...
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