coin slab manufacturers

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by gewoodfo, Dec 5, 2007.

  1. gewoodfo

    gewoodfo Member

    alll: Can anyone provide or point me to resources that can identify the various companies that manufacture the slabs that PCGS, NGC,
    ANACAS, ICG and other TPGs use.

    I have an idea for a new slab that will help against tampering and fraud.

    Thanks,

    G.E.
     
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  3. Daggarjon

    Daggarjon Supporter**

    cool!! i hope your idea is used and makes you some royalties :D

    but remember, as soon as you build a better mousetrap, the mice get smarter :D
     
  4. numiseagle

    numiseagle New Member

    Yeah...I do also. It is called RFID inside each slab to uniquely identify each coin. Very difficult to counterfiet radio frequency. The crook would have to know the frequency for each one.
     
  5. Treashunt

    Treashunt The Other Frank

    cute idea, and welcome to the forum.
     
  6. gxseries

    gxseries Coin Collector

    And the cost of slabbing will go up by an extra "few" dollars. Great - it's only worth for coins that are worth several hundreds but justifiable.
     
  7. numiseagle

    numiseagle New Member

    Thanks for the welcome. Correct. The cost would be justified for high dollar coins. I would certainly reslab several of mine if PCGS were to offer such a service. Wave a coin over a personal RFID reader and coins are automatically checked against the central database. Protects seller, buyer, and the reputation of the coin grading companies.
     
  8. 900fine

    900fine doggone it people like me

    According to Doug, NGC slabs about 150,000 coins a month. 1.8 million a year.

    Are you advocating each coin having it's own frequency ? That's 1.8 million different frequencies a year.

    Or are you thinking one frequency, and each chip has its own unique info ? THAT makes sense.

    They're even doing that for dogs... they implant a little chip with the owner's info in case the dog gets lost.
     
  9. numiseagle

    numiseagle New Member

    Each chip would have its own unique identifier. This is already done at the pallet and case level of many consumer products. There is a vision to eventually have item level tagging of most consumer products to do away with the bar code system.
     
  10. Daggarjon

    Daggarjon Supporter**

    RFID tags are gaining widespread use. Walmart i belive is helping to lead the way requireing all their manufacturers to include RFID tages in all their shipments. i am not sure if that has been implemented as of yet, but if not, its on its way.

    RFID tags are small, but im not sure if one could be hidden in a slab. Slabs can already be opened, and quite possibly resealed. So if they can be opened, could the RFID tag inside be swapped with a different one?
     
  11. grizz

    grizz numismatist

    slab ideas

    while you're at it...............figure a way to make 'em air tight!
     
  12. Cloudsweeper99

    Cloudsweeper99 Treasure Hunter

    I doubt your idea will result in any royalties. Anybody could go around saying 'put RFID tags on the car, and on the boat, and on the soup can, and on the lawnmower, and on the dog...'
     
  13. Jhonn

    Jhonn Team Awesome

    Neat idea, but I don't really need any more RFID tags in my life. I have a hard enough time keeping multi-national corporations from intruding into my personal space and tracking every purchase I make so that I can be targeted and bombarded with advertisements. I've read quite a bit about this technology, and there's a lot to it, but here's a quick overview: http://www.news.com/2010-1069-980325.html
     
  14. gmarguli

    gmarguli Slightly Evil™

    The TPG do not give out this information. It is (somewhat) tightly guarded. Your best bet would be to contact a TPG and see if they have any interest in listening to your idea.
     
  15. Just Carl

    Just Carl Numismatist

    Try contacting the China embassy. They are presently counterfeiting coins and lately the slabs so they must have a few organizations that could make them for you. Not exactly sure what your suggestion would accomplish. I've seen slabs opened, coins replaced, slab resealed so that it could not be detected. So the only way your suggestion would be of any use would be if they could implant the slabs with something that would start honking and flashing lights like a cars burlar alarm. Of course if this was done many places in China would become noisy. No organization would publish the source of thier plastic slabs due to the massive run on them from all kinds of people wanting to start thier own TPG services. We have enough already including China.
     
  16. Numister

    Numister New Member

    The problem with RFID is security. You can easily modify data written to a device with RFID.
     
  17. hiho

    hiho off to work we go

    Absolutely correct.
     
  18. PennyGuy

    PennyGuy US and CDN Copper

    The last post to this thread before yesterday was in 2007 I believe. Let me add by saying that RFID has so little security as to have none.
     
  19. coinhead63

    coinhead63 Not slabbed yet

    Those are the ones being countfieted. Makes good sense. If the grading services had a dollar value threshold set for installing the RFIDs it would work. Offer it as an option on lesser valued coins.
     
  20. DionHurst

    DionHurst Member

    Personally if I was a thief and saw the number on a slab I would remove the coin from the slab prior to hocking or selling it! Mostly thieves want easy money and not trying to get full price. Now other persons swapping coins and what have you is something completely different.

    So eliminate that and you got something.
     
  21. Frankcoins.com

    Frankcoins.com Junior Member

    Each slab would have a unique RFID number linked to the slab serial number. The only way a RFID chip could be cloned for a fake slab would be that the counterfeiter would have to have to physical possession of EACH slab he counterfeits. They could not simply steal online images and generate a legit slab number on the label. Cost of each RFID tag? About 4 cents.
     
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