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1867 $1 Seated Liberty (graded PR63 CAM by ANACS)
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<p>[QUOTE="huntsman53, post: 178942, member: 1242"]samjimmy,</p><p><br /></p><p>Although the latest picture that you posted is fairly small, it appears that what appeared to be minor rim damage in the original pics, may have been just the angle of the shot!</p><p><br /></p><p>PCGS values for the coin in PF-63 CAM is $3,600, in PF-64 CAM is $7,250 and in PF-65 CAM is $19,000. The history of the sale of 1867 Seated Liberty Silver Dollars in CoinFacts are quite a bit lower than the current in print values for the coin but the last coin in Proof 63 or better sold around 5 years ago. They apparently have not updated the website with any of the later auction prices for the coin. I have copied and pasted below the link that shows the sales history noted on CoinFacts.</p><p><br /></p><p><a href="http://www.coinfacts.com/silver_dollars/seated_liberty_dollars/1867_silver_dollar.htm" target="_blank" class="externalLink ProxyLink" data-proxy-href="http://www.coinfacts.com/silver_dollars/seated_liberty_dollars/1867_silver_dollar.htm" rel="nofollow">http://www.coinfacts.com/silver_dollars/seated_liberty_dollars/1867_silver_dollar.htm</a></p><p><br /></p><p>If you really want the coin, then tell the Coin Dealer that you are serious about purchasing the coin if he can get the price in a range that you can live with. If he then comes down in the a price closer to what you would want to pay, then you can still state that you will give him $X,XXX for the coin and see if he will take it. If not, then you can always weigh your options and if you feel that you can live with the lower price that he gave you, you can purchase the coin at that price. By all means, do not ask the Dealer to send the coin to NGC or PCGS to see if it will crossover at the current grade or even higher grade, since he may then really jack up the price! If you purchase the coin, then you then have the option to send it to PCGS or NGC to see if it will get the same grade or higher grade. Do not let them down grade the coin (which is highly unlikely but is always possible) just to get it into a PCGS or NGC slab. If you are sure that there is no damage whatsoever on the coin, then I would consider PCGS first and NGC second simply because of the history of prices realized for coins in PCGS slabs.</p><p><br /></p><p>Good luck!</p><p><br /></p><p><br /></p><p>The Other, Other Frank[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="huntsman53, post: 178942, member: 1242"]samjimmy, Although the latest picture that you posted is fairly small, it appears that what appeared to be minor rim damage in the original pics, may have been just the angle of the shot! PCGS values for the coin in PF-63 CAM is $3,600, in PF-64 CAM is $7,250 and in PF-65 CAM is $19,000. The history of the sale of 1867 Seated Liberty Silver Dollars in CoinFacts are quite a bit lower than the current in print values for the coin but the last coin in Proof 63 or better sold around 5 years ago. They apparently have not updated the website with any of the later auction prices for the coin. I have copied and pasted below the link that shows the sales history noted on CoinFacts. [url]http://www.coinfacts.com/silver_dollars/seated_liberty_dollars/1867_silver_dollar.htm[/url] If you really want the coin, then tell the Coin Dealer that you are serious about purchasing the coin if he can get the price in a range that you can live with. If he then comes down in the a price closer to what you would want to pay, then you can still state that you will give him $X,XXX for the coin and see if he will take it. If not, then you can always weigh your options and if you feel that you can live with the lower price that he gave you, you can purchase the coin at that price. By all means, do not ask the Dealer to send the coin to NGC or PCGS to see if it will crossover at the current grade or even higher grade, since he may then really jack up the price! If you purchase the coin, then you then have the option to send it to PCGS or NGC to see if it will get the same grade or higher grade. Do not let them down grade the coin (which is highly unlikely but is always possible) just to get it into a PCGS or NGC slab. If you are sure that there is no damage whatsoever on the coin, then I would consider PCGS first and NGC second simply because of the history of prices realized for coins in PCGS slabs. Good luck! The Other, Other Frank[/QUOTE]
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1867 $1 Seated Liberty (graded PR63 CAM by ANACS)
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