Ef Or Xf ?

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by coinnut, Jul 28, 2007.

  1. coinnut

    coinnut Senior Member

    just wondering which abbreviation is more popularly used,EF or XF?
     
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  3. rlm's cents

    rlm's cents Numismatist

    FYI; ANACS uses EF, but Heritage, NGC, and PCGS use XF. Although the experts disagree, I think XF has the edge.
     
  4. bqcoins

    bqcoins Olympic Figure Skating Scoring System Expert

    I've always used XF
     
  5. mikenoodle

    mikenoodle The Village Idiot Supporter

    This is JMHO, and I am sure it doesn't matter to anyone but...

    EF sounds like VF and in conversation might be confusing, so I personally prefer XF.
     
  6. Treashunt

    Treashunt The Other Frank

    both are perfectly acceptable.
    However, I use XF
     
  7. Bonedigger

    Bonedigger New Member

    EF-40 and XF-45

    Close the thread it's pointless, LOL...
     
  8. Shortgapbob

    Shortgapbob Emerging Numismatist

    The official ANA Grading Standards for US Coins uses EF for both 40 and 45 grades and makes a special note about the correct abbreviation being EF instead of XF.

    It's kind of funny how the market has adopted XF.
     
  9. rlm's cents

    rlm's cents Numismatist

    I think Mike hit the nail on the head. VF and EF sound too much alike. XF is not the least confusing.
     
  10. Cloudsweeper99

    Cloudsweeper99 Treasure Hunter

    I usually use EF. The word starts with the letter E.
     
  11. DJCoinz

    DJCoinz Majored in Morganology

    What he said. :)
     
  12. NumisMatty

    NumisMatty Numis-Matt-ist

    In Brit-land we use EF and even have a strange system at auctions and such likes where we use "good ef" instead of ef/xf+
     
  13. cwtokenman

    cwtokenman Coin Hoarder

    I typically use XF, and XF seems to be used much more commonly than EF in exonumia circles. But then we are kind of in our own little world.
     
  14. Clinker

    Clinker Coin Collector

    EF means extremely fine and XF means extra fine: Both are acceptable but I see EF more often on coin price lists and internet websites.

    Clinker
     
  15. Treashunt

    Treashunt The Other Frank

    yes, I agree and on eBay it generally refers to a G-4 coin.
     
  16. Just Carl

    Just Carl Numismatist

    If my memory serves me right XF was what we used to use a long, long time ago. When the first Red Books came out and dealers couldn't say F or Unc, they would say XF. There were not to many grades back then. Little by little people started to use AG, AF, and a few others. But if you look at the old Red Books there was only G, F, Unc and proof. Lately no one I know uses XF anymore. At coin shows I've never seen XF for anything. Only now with the EF stuff. I would assume if you use the XF notation you are probably close to my age and some older. Young people all use the notations in the Books regardless of anything an old person says.
     
  17. asciibaron

    asciibaron /dev/work/null

    any world coin dealer worth his salt uses XF. since i work for SGS (steve's good stuff) i call them MS69.

    hehe

    -Steve
     
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