SOLD The Old type set: Intercept S. Album with remaining coins

Discussion in 'For Sale' started by Vess1, Nov 18, 2018.

  1. Vess1

    Vess1 CT SP VIP Supporter

    Hi guys. I am looking to part ways with my old type set. By old I mean it began around 2010. I've moved on to other endeavors in this hobby. Some things were removed from this album to begin another type set.
    As was the case with another batch of coins I recently sold on here, this is kind of an extra to me now that I'd just as soon put into something else. I'm not looking to make money on this. Instead, I see it as another venture in "recouping some" to put back into coins and hopefully somebody will be happy with the deal. Not looking to split up at this time.

    I will list what is here and conservative values with a total and you can click the attachments to view it.

    Intercept Shield album itself: Since it is 8 years old- FREE. It includes the added gold page and I replaced the pins binding it together with stainless steel ones from hardware store which are much higher quality than the originals. (Over $45 worth of stuff) (EDIT: Was cleaning house yesterday and just found two BRAND NEW pages for this set. It's the cent page and the modern/commems page. The plastic slides have never been slid open and they're gem. These are included as extras now for your use. I don't even know how or why I have them.)

    Coins remaining and my best guess grades with values:

    1909 IHC VG: $10
    1958-D Wheat: MS-65RD PERFECT: $10
    1943 Steel cent: still shiny, MS64 $10
    Couple common Lincolns: free
    1864 2c piece: $25
    1868 3c nickel: $25
    1866 Shield Nickel G: $20
    1883 Liberty Head No Cents: MS62: $40
    1912 Lib Head Nickel VG: $15
    1938-D Buffalo Nickel PCGS MS65 Crack out w/label- $40 ($40 to $60 on ebay)
    1950-D nickel MS super nice: $20
    1945-P silver War nickel NGC MS66 crack out w/label- $20 (These are 40 to $75 on ebay)
    2008 Jefferson-Free
    1883 LS dime VG- $10
    1945-S Micro S Merc- VG- Free
    1958 Roosie toned- $10
    1930 SLQ - $10
    1964 Wash quart MS65- $6
    2009 P Clad Wash- MS69 Free
    1910-S Barber half VG- $20 (What i paid for it at a show)
    1964-D Kennedy half- MS64- $10
    1899-O Morgan MS63 Conservt. - $60
    1926- P Peace Dollar MS63- $50
    1971-S Eisenhower MS- $10
    1999 Anthony dollar MS- Free
    2000 Sac Great law MS- Free
    1976 Bicent quarter high MS- Free from mint cello
    1976 Bicent kennedy half from mint cello MS64-$10
    1976 Eisenhower MS- $10 from mint cello
    1892 Toned Columbian expo half-$30
    1982 Washington silver half- $10
    2008-S Bald Eagle Commem half- $10
    Westward Journey nickel set, perfect- Free
    1999 Delaware State quarter MS64- Free
    2008 Bald eagle Commem silver (old eagle Rev)MS70- $40
    2010 Silver Eagle (New heraldic Eagle reverse) MS-69- $20
    (reverses forward, I thought was neat)
    George Wash. Presidential dollar- Free
    2009-D Lincoln cent set, perfect- Free and spot free

    Ok, so *what I'm charging for* adds up to just over $550. I believe these numbers are fairly conservative with a lot of free stuff (that I paid to get), and with a free album with gold page. Since I really want to move this and I'm pretty hot and heavy on something else, I'm willing to take off another $100.

    $450 SHIPPED by Paypal please!!!!

    A lot of the moderns I left in the album are universal and you really wouldn't need to replace. There's just no point in taking them out and this isn't something dealers want to deal with but a collector out there might really like this. Would make unbelievable Christmas gift. I think the commem page is really cool. A lot of stuff came directly out of mint packaging and went in the album. Two are slab crack outs.
    The album pages have plastic slips front and back. I put coins in with gloves. Also pushed them all the way down and only moved the top slip so none ever got scraped over by the plastic. (Only move the obverse face plastic.)
    Thanks!
     

    Attached Files:

    Last edited: Nov 26, 2018

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