I can't see anything wrong with it. It looks like an MS-65 to me.
Looking at this further, perhaps the photos have been photoshopped or puttied. At any rate, I would not buy the piece from these photos.
@Cherd, I think you will find it cheaper and less aggravating to buy coins that have already been certified. The selection of raw, no problem U.S....
I would grade the Indian cent MS-64, Red The Silver Three Cent Piece, AU-55 The 1806 half cent VF-30 sharpness, perhaps cleaned The 1857 Flying...
The photos make the surfaces look odd, especially on the obverse. They look to have been smoothed, although I doubt that. I see a slight break in...
The one on the left is a 1917 Type 1. Almost all of those coins are well struck. After that success, Herman McNeil decided the mess with the...
[ATTACH] Compare the coin on the left with the picture of OP coin on the right. Look at Ms. Liberty's knee and c
Here are photos of the 1876-CC Twenty Cent Piece with the doubled "LIBERTY." [ATTACH] [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
Real grade, AU-58. There is a rub on Ms. Liberty’s right knee. Holder grade, MS-62. The head is probably full, but it is slightly impaired from a...
The only advice I would have would be to talk to PCGS. Their software might have a glitch in it that blocks coins that were once rejected because...
My avatar ... [ATTACH]
Here is the best, highest grade, 20 cent piece I have. This one is graded MS-65, and it's "all there." [ATTACH] This series has fascinated me...
My late father in law took one of the scammers to the point where they wanted him to buy a gift certificate and give them the serial number. I...
Robo calls drive my wife and I nuts. I got calls from a well known company that is known for selling bullion with a few certified coins on the...
The grading services are swamped right now. There is no way that they could take the time to provide that service. You might post pictures here....
I believe this occurred with a 1694 Elephant token. I think that it is the reason why CAC no longer certifies pre 1792 American "colonial" coinage.
When I was a dealer, I found the grading for Franklin Half Dollars to be very inconsistent. I used to cherry-pick the under graded pieces and sell...
That 1872-S counterfeit half dollar is one scary devil. Here is a genuine piece taken for the PCGS Coin Facts Site. [ATTACH]
Consecutive serial numbers indicate that the coins were submitted as a set. You must have bought them as a set.
And Morgan Dollars are bigger. In U.S. coins, the bigger the better, usually.
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