Missing edge lettering worth

Discussion in 'What's it Worth' started by magill coin, Sep 4, 2020.

  1. Collecting Nut

    Collecting Nut Borderline Hoarder

    It's just missing the edge lettering. It's not an ounce of gold.
     
    ZoidMeister likes this.
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  3. Nyatii

    Nyatii I like running w/scissors. Makes me feel dangerous

    The OP should look up Supply and Demand.
     
  4. Jim Dale

    Jim Dale Well-Known Member

    I very seldom read comments like above, but, thank you for giving me Great Collections. I had not stretched out to find a lot of websites concerning coins. Coin Talk is the best site I have found that answers questions. Sometimes you have to be tough to get inside there hide so that they will stretch their knowledge. Great job, guys and gals and again, Thank you.
     
  5. magill coin

    magill coin New Member

    My apologies to all of you. My intent was based on the excitement of finding something that I have not seen before in that year. My goal was to find an approximate value, and to find out how few or many that were out there. i have looked at results and can find hundreds of 09's but no 11's. i was hoping the experience of those here could help.
     
  6. Randy Abercrombie

    Randy Abercrombie Supporter! Supporter

    Many of us serious collectors are intrigued by the history we hold in our coins. And we do tend to get pretty intent with the details. However in recent years this whole thing with finding errors that some websites will make the average person think they have just hit the lottery has made some of us punch drunk. We see them most every day and more often than not the poster is convinced they are in possession of a windfall..... Coin error collecting can be fun. All coin collecting is rewarding. Enjoy the hobby, OP. I am headed to my couch.
     
  7. TonkawaBill

    TonkawaBill Well-Known Member

    I bought 4 Washington Dollars, slabbed by ANACS as ms-66 for $35 each - letter less all 4.
     
  8. John Burgess

    John Burgess Well-Known Member

    They make the proofs in a single squeeze with a 3 segmented collar. The problem is its slow, the collar breaks a lot ect.
    They opted for the 2 step process, strike and then edge lettering for the circulation strikes to mass produce them with less stoppages.

    They get a about 19k coins out of the 3 segment collar on the single strike method before the collar breaks, but by doing the strike first then running them through the edge lettering machine there's much less stoppages to reset. The two step process is "messier" though, more contact marks ect., it produces an inferior product.
     
  9. Mr.Q

    Mr.Q Well-Known Member

    I viewed this coin on ebay and my first thought was Bull.... The or best offer in my mind was, not interested!
     
  10. whopper64

    whopper64 Well-Known Member

    And the individual selling it should know better since he/she has been on e-Bay for awhile. But then again, a sucker is born every minute!
     
    ZoidMeister likes this.
  11. ZoidMeister

    ZoidMeister Hamlet Squire of Tomfoolery . . . . .


    The other point is trying to protect newcomers from unscrupulous sellers who will unduly hype something that is fairly common or just not that noteworthy.

    I saw someone trying to sell a circulated Lincoln cent on Ebay with edge scratches as a "unique error". The ask was only $25 + shipping.

    I think that gets under everyone's skin more than simple misunderstandings about what compromises a truly rare error coin.

    Go look up this one . . .

    Z


    Screenshot_20200905-150432_eBay.jpg
     
    Randy Abercrombie likes this.
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