I'm sure the OP will reimburse CoinTalk for the cost of starting a new thread. :rolleyes: It's a coin old enough that it's unusual to find in...
Yes, I see it now. Don't have any useful response for your question :oops:, but I do see the image...
I'm not seeing the image from my end, either. Did you upload it to CoinTalk, or link it from another site where you'd uploaded it already?
See further discussion in this earlier thread.
My thought exactly. Soon, if you want to sell this coin to someone in North Carolina, you'll need to know whether it's a coin -- because coins are...
If you're looking for a buyer with that birth date, you'd better hurry...
Or not, depending on whether Jupiter is aligned with Mars... :rolleyes:
As others have pointed out, "take [a coin/not-coin] to a store [today] and try and spend it" isn't a good test. If we extend that from...
It's an 1873-S, for which the closed 3 is the more common (and less valuable) variety. And it's a bit beaten up, surely not mint state. I don't...
It's not always too good to be true. But when big chunks of gold are in play, there's no way I'm going to meet a stranger in the middle of nowhere...
...and I'm not sure that's much of a factor at the energy levels used in MRI. However, if you've got a loop of metal of the right size, it could...
If they're that small, I wonder if they're actually solid (low-carat) gold?
Do you really think so? Given your experience in your geographic area, don't you think there are huge numbers left that haven't been indoctrinated...
Did I spoil the joke again? :oops:
Nah, but it would have made a mess of the images in that area.
I'd drive a good distance for that, knowing that I could flip it for a profit easily. None of the pawn shops around here will sell anywhere close...
Oh, come on, Doug. It's clearly a dime planchet. Bang, "identifiable value", along with "silver or other metal". It's clearly got a partial...
Not a 1945-P? Aww... :(
Not really new at all, as I understand it.
And this thread is being left up because...? [IMG]
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