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READ THIS! The Next Generation Of Chinese Counterfeits Have Arrived
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<p>[QUOTE="imrich, post: 2136737, member: 22331"]I believe that you'll find with minimal investigation that like ourselves when we tried to duplicate the jet/rocket technology of Germany and others, even though we had Robert Oppenheimer and Wernher von Braun, when one tries to duplicate without accepting/understanding intricacies, inferior results are realized.</p><p><br /></p><p>Some Chinese business people try to duplicate the "bottom line" efforts of our society, who realize that salesmanship trumps excellence. In a discard oriented society where cost is the primary motivator, the quality is irrelevant.</p><p><br /></p><p>I've worked on new technology design projects with Chinese Scientists employed in this country, have 2 Chinese grandaughters, and a son who develops partnered technology for Asia. Generally, to a person, these individuals are objectively focused on the "goal", as the average American could hardly understand. A reason why many institutions of advanced learning or new technology have a large concentration in their midst.</p><p><br /></p><p>If one wants an inexpensive "Silver" high grade cursory examination quarter that can be sold after several transfers for $5 U.S., they will deliver. If one is willing to pay a reasonable price for a product that can't be identified as a replica, they can also accomodate. I have both, and have tested the premier "experts", to only realize a response of "Questionable Authenticity".</p><p><br /></p><p>I had an acquired Gem+ condition 1909P encapsulated "Double Eagle" which I passed to everyone personally considered to be a grading authoritarian. Not one would match my high value wager offer on the condition/origin of the coin. Eventually the coin was submitted to the premier TPG, realizing QA responses.</p><p><br /></p><p>If you desire non-detectible replicas of U.S. coinage, I believe the Chinese will excel in delivering same. I believe you get that for which you paid, as cited in my previous post where it's published that the U.S. Mint paid ~$6,400,000 for damaged "replicas" proported from China.</p><p><br /></p><p>JMHO.[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="imrich, post: 2136737, member: 22331"]I believe that you'll find with minimal investigation that like ourselves when we tried to duplicate the jet/rocket technology of Germany and others, even though we had Robert Oppenheimer and Wernher von Braun, when one tries to duplicate without accepting/understanding intricacies, inferior results are realized. Some Chinese business people try to duplicate the "bottom line" efforts of our society, who realize that salesmanship trumps excellence. In a discard oriented society where cost is the primary motivator, the quality is irrelevant. I've worked on new technology design projects with Chinese Scientists employed in this country, have 2 Chinese grandaughters, and a son who develops partnered technology for Asia. Generally, to a person, these individuals are objectively focused on the "goal", as the average American could hardly understand. A reason why many institutions of advanced learning or new technology have a large concentration in their midst. If one wants an inexpensive "Silver" high grade cursory examination quarter that can be sold after several transfers for $5 U.S., they will deliver. If one is willing to pay a reasonable price for a product that can't be identified as a replica, they can also accomodate. I have both, and have tested the premier "experts", to only realize a response of "Questionable Authenticity". I had an acquired Gem+ condition 1909P encapsulated "Double Eagle" which I passed to everyone personally considered to be a grading authoritarian. Not one would match my high value wager offer on the condition/origin of the coin. Eventually the coin was submitted to the premier TPG, realizing QA responses. If you desire non-detectible replicas of U.S. coinage, I believe the Chinese will excel in delivering same. I believe you get that for which you paid, as cited in my previous post where it's published that the U.S. Mint paid ~$6,400,000 for damaged "replicas" proported from China. JMHO.[/QUOTE]
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READ THIS! The Next Generation Of Chinese Counterfeits Have Arrived
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