My 1877-S and my 1875-S. The first one is very common with 9,519,000 minted. The second one has 4,487,000 minted with this being reverse 1....
My 1878-S Trade Dollar. More common than the 1877. 4,162,000 were minted.[ATTACH] [ATTACH]
My 1877 Trade Dollar. A common date with 3,039,200 minted. No chop marks on this one. :) [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
What you see is common for this date.
Only the 1939-D has the next lowest mintage and it has almost a million more than the 1950-D, which has a total mintage of 2,630,030.
In a few months. :)
But I became a member of CT before you did. :)
Thank you. This has always worked for me but I will admit, I used several common date, low grade silver coins to practice on first.
H er e is a super 1950-D Jefferson Nickel, a key date. It’s been graded as MS-65 by PCGS. In hand it’s a great looking coin. As typical, it’s does...
I’ve never seen nor heard of such but it sounds reasonable. Then again, when did coins start to get slabbed and graded? I doubt any photos were...
AU-53 and too much for the coin because of the toning.
I’d use a product called E-zest. A very quick dip, no rubbing and a complete and thorough rise under warm water. If you over dip you will lose the...
It needs to be off more than that to get some attention.
Only this one and it’s great!
Nice information. Thanks.
Each die has minor differences and this is one of them.
A definite strike through! Nice one too!
I wouldn’t think so but I don’t really know. It’s not like I shine my black light on them. I do shine it on yellow and green antique glass. If it...
This coin fills my #4 folder so I just need a 1885-CC for the second folder and the 1893-S for the third folder. The hunt is on to fill my needs.
A week ago it was four but the last two will be difficult but not impossible. I have the money as I’ve been saving but one is costly and the other...
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