What's with this 32-D Quarter?

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by Ed Goldman, Dec 25, 2008.

  1. Ed Goldman

    Ed Goldman coin collector

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  3. BigsWick

    BigsWick Rat Powered

    ANGS? Never heard of them.

    Coin looks genuine, but the obverse is really baggy in the photos. Notice the rim ticks on the reverse from about 5 to 7 o'clock. I'd say more like AU-58 or MS-60.
     
  4. ksparrow

    ksparrow Coin Hoarder Supporter

    Some experiences with this seller are on the eBAy coin and currency discussion board, "New Coin Scams Thread."

    personally, I think buying one of these outside of a reliable tpg holder is a recipe for trouble. This item, if genuine, looks lackluster, dinged up, and probably cleaned.
     
  5. Arizona Jack

    Arizona Jack The Lincoln-ator

    There is no price too cheap for a problem coin.....Rick Snow


    looks like a dipped slider to me, and a not attractive one at that, authenticity questions aside
     
  6. the_man12

    the_man12 Amateur Photographer

    Come on. Now I'm hungry...
     
  7. Boss

    Boss Coin Hoarder

    I agree with the above. No cartwheel luster (cleaned), lots of nicks and probably AU 58- MS 60. Wouldn't touch it.
     
  8. johnny54321

    johnny54321 aspiring numismatist

    Yeah. I wouldnt touch this coin for a plethora of reasons.
     
  9. rld14

    rld14 Custom User Title

    Rule #1 on eBay: Most anything of real value in a nonsense "slab" is there because it won't go in a real slab (PCGS, NGC, maybe ANACS or ICG).

    And here's how the seller is protected, the throw up a return policy that says "No returns if you crack it out of the holder". Well say you do crack it out and it turns out to be a 1935-D reverse sandwiched over the front half of a 1932-P?

    Do what I do, take a chance on $5-10 coins you can't get hurt on, not a key date.
     
  10. kanga

    kanga 65 Year Collector

    It's bad. Maybe genuine, but still bad.
    If you don't buy it, you don't have to worry about cracking it out and returning it.
    Put it out of your mind.
     
  11. jazzcoins

    jazzcoins New Member

    Well I guess the guy most have put that coin in the case and made it himself an came up with a grading company name ANAG instead of ANACs To try and fool you . The coin is about a MS61 there are some nicks on the obverse and reverse and visible with the naked eye. i would stay away from this one . The ANGS stands for Another Nonsense Graded Sucker

    Jazzcoins Joe
     

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  12. jloring

    jloring Senior Citizen

    One negative feedback for this seller reads: "Anyone besides me notice his bogus slabs ALL have identical FAKE "bar codes"!!?!"; and guess what? The 32-D has the same barcode as all his other listings. Amazing.
     
  13. Cloudsweeper99

    Cloudsweeper99 Treasure Hunter

    It looks like a heavily cleaned coin in a deceptive fake slab.
     
  14. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    ANGS is a fly-by-night or self slabber and they first showed up about 6 to 8 months ago. Thanks for the tip though on the barcodes, I hadn't noticed before that they were all the same.
     
  15. rockdude

    rockdude Coin Collector

    It's counterfeit. :goofer: I really don't know.
     
  16. quartertapper

    quartertapper Numismatist

    I have no doubt this slab is fake. The coin could be authentic. I just feel if a guy is willing to sell a fake slab, he definately has the guts to sell a counterfiet coin also.
     
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