Do NGC or PCGS ever use XRF machines for coin authentication?

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Gam3rBlake, Oct 1, 2021.

  1. Gam3rBlake

    Gam3rBlake Well-Known Member

    I’m guessing he means the best consumer grade XRF machines.

    Like one of the Olympus ones. They cost about $13,000 which most people couldn’t afford but PCGS & NGC most definitely could. Especially if it means it helps them avoid fakes considering they guarantee authenticity.

    There are a lot of coins worth over $13,000 and if a fake one got by and got slabbed they would be responsible for reimbursing the person who bought it for the fair market value of the coin and it would be a disaster if it was an expensive coin like that.

    I’m also guessing (I can’t say for sure though) that they spend more time & resources on the expensive stuff specifically to prevent such situations.

    For example they probably don’t spend much time on say a PF67 1955 Roosevelt Dime since if they mess up it’s only like $30 to reimburse but if it’s something like an AU58 1893 S Morgan Dollar and they screw up it would be a catastrophic disaster for them since they’d be on the hook for ~$95,000 owed to the customer for their mistake.
     
    Last edited: Oct 2, 2021
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  3. cplradar

    cplradar Talmud Chuchum


    every organiation which is invovled in conservation has industrial level tools on this technology, not to mention a catscan and other tech. In the house it might be expensive, but on a business scale, is is an essential tool. What do they use to inspect plane parts?
     
  4. cplradar

    cplradar Talmud Chuchum

  5. -jeffB

    -jeffB Greshams LEO Supporter

    No, it's about Laser-Stimulated Fluorescence being used on fossils, as it says in the abstract. It mentions some elemental analysis they did on one of the SLAC beamlines, but only in passing -- that's not the point of the paper.
     
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  6. Hookman

    Hookman Well-Known Member

    Thanks for your links and your opinions.
     
  7. -jeffB

    -jeffB Greshams LEO Supporter

    It's worth emphasizing that @calcol's opinions on this topic appear to be very well-informed.
     
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  8. cplradar

    cplradar Talmud Chuchum

    this is the work done by SLAC, in a lecture that explains the technology

     
  9. cplradar

    cplradar Talmud Chuchum

  10. Hookman

    Hookman Well-Known Member

    No offense, but I thought we were talking about a hand-held XRF gun that costs about $1500.00 to $2000.00, not ".. a billion-dollar facility."
    From everything I've seen(a gun in use), read(the readout as it's being used and the factory user's manual), and talked to actual XRF gun users(and manufacturer's representatives) about, I believe the gun can penetrate a coin, if not through the coin, then at least far enough to do a spectral analysis.

    Bottom line : I trust it to accurately test my coins.
     
  11. cplradar

    cplradar Talmud Chuchum

    https://www.olympus-ims.com/en/xrf-xrd/xrf-handheld/
     
  12. Gam3rBlake

    Gam3rBlake Well-Known Member

    Oh I actually saw something on TV pretty cool about authenticating old art works.

    Apparently one method they use is testing the wood & paint for uranium molecules. After the first nuclear weapons tests in the 1940s there were tiny amounts of uranium all over the world so if the wood from the frame or in the paint has uranium in it they can prove without a doubt that it was made after 1945.

    Good luck trying to fake a Da Vinci or an Old Master painting.
     
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  13. Hookman

    Hookman Well-Known Member

    No offense, but did I say his opinions weren't well-informed?
     
  14. Hookman

    Hookman Well-Known Member

  15. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator

    Here's the thing Blake - no technology, regardless of how expensive it is, can correctly identify all fakes. Now granted, sometimes technology can give you the correct answer, but many times what is needed to correctly identify fakes/counterfeits is the human eye and knowledge - and nothing more.

    I'm saying that because the best fakes/counterfeits, they are made with exactly the correct metal composition, the correct fineness, weight and size, and the technology is fooled when that occurs. But the human eye, and knowledge - they can correctly identify the fake/counterfeit.
     
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  16. -jeffB

    -jeffB Greshams LEO Supporter

    Okay, yeah, I'll admit the APS was over the top. When someone says "the best of the best", I let my imagination run free. :)

    As for hand-held gun cost, if somebody one day produces a reliable hand-held XRF the price of a double eagle, I'll be first in line to grab one. Today, they start around ten times that. I've seen used ones offered for less than $10K, but with no guarantees.

    The numbers I've found indicate that effective penetration depth in gold is much less than a millimeter. Remember, the higher-energy X-rays have to get into the deeper sample, but then the lower-energy fluorescence X-rays need to get back out, too. If there's just thin gold plating, the gun will see through it. If there's a half-millimeter or more of gold around a tungsten core, it can't. To detect that, you need a sonic or electronic method.
     
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  17. cplradar

    cplradar Talmud Chuchum


    your sun glasses is killing us!
     
  18. cplradar

    cplradar Talmud Chuchum


    more than enough for gold foil detection and you can do the back and the front... no extra charge :)
     
  19. Gam3rBlake

    Gam3rBlake Well-Known Member

    I know that no technology can identify all fakes. But shouldn’t we use the technology available to do the best we can?

    Just like a scale can weigh a coin it may not identify all fakes but if a fake does happen to be the wrong weight at least it identifies that one fake which might not have been identified without the scale.
     
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  20. cplradar

    cplradar Talmud Chuchum

    AI will be able to ID them better than humans. Give it a year or two tops.
     
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  21. -jeffB

    -jeffB Greshams LEO Supporter

    Not a year or two, but eventually, I agree.
     
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