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<p>[QUOTE="baseball21, post: 2900232, member: 76863"]True because of the Lincolns, but that could also be changed overnight easily and is really just a result of submission bias. Obviously there are more red coins left from the last 50 years than before, most just aren't worth submitting. </p><p><br /></p><p><br /></p><p><br /></p><p>Into the million yes, not millions though unless the NCG population is over double the PCGS and that includes a significant portion of moderns.</p><p><br /></p><p><br /></p><p><br /></p><p>Not every single one turns quickly or at all, just like some coins will tone quickly and others seem to never want to even when they came right from the mint and you know they haven't been dipped. </p><p><br /></p><p>I don't find it inconceivable that a minuscule percentage of a mintage could have ended up in an environment that kept it red. Pretty much every climate you can think of exists in the country and some are much more favorable than others. We're really talking about a fraction of one percent of the mintages for the older coins. Were a few dipped successfully probably, but that isn't the only possible way they could still be red.[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="baseball21, post: 2900232, member: 76863"]True because of the Lincolns, but that could also be changed overnight easily and is really just a result of submission bias. Obviously there are more red coins left from the last 50 years than before, most just aren't worth submitting. Into the million yes, not millions though unless the NCG population is over double the PCGS and that includes a significant portion of moderns. Not every single one turns quickly or at all, just like some coins will tone quickly and others seem to never want to even when they came right from the mint and you know they haven't been dipped. I don't find it inconceivable that a minuscule percentage of a mintage could have ended up in an environment that kept it red. Pretty much every climate you can think of exists in the country and some are much more favorable than others. We're really talking about a fraction of one percent of the mintages for the older coins. Were a few dipped successfully probably, but that isn't the only possible way they could still be red.[/QUOTE]
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