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Henri Charriere

Member: Seasoned Veteran
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Posts posted by Henri Charriere

  1. On 12/10/2020 at 6:26 PM, Quintus Arrius said:

    The thrill of victory... part 1. I purchased a 20-euro banknote (for 28 and change) threw it in an envelope and mailed it directly from Grand Central's adjoining post office.  Not 24 hours later, a 1908 MS 67 French 20-franc gold rooster arrived, professionally packaged, with an invoice which indicated, based on my prior satisfactory buying experience, some fancy footwork was engaged in to justify the shortage (13.45 euros) they termed a "global discount." I placed it in my Set Registry ATS and my overall standing, now 65.688, was increased by a whopping 0.093, within hours.  My intention is to compile the finest possible set rating which currently stands at 67.219.  Yes, even if doing so reduces me at [damned near] 70 years old to scavenging for bottles and cans in the street.  Stay tuned for part 2 which involves a similar purchase from a reputable dealer in California and a request to have it cross-graded.  Hopefully, with the sluggish way things are moving, I will get a sneak preview on the verdict sometime early next year.

    That time, as you may have read elsewhere, has come with catastrophic results.  There is a part of me that believed (figuratively speaking) if you are sitting in an outside office of a TPGS while the reputable well-known dealer steps inside to have the coin you purchased at considerable cost cross-graded, professional courtesy dictates that you will prevail. That did not happen.  In fact, it has never happened to me before though it has happened to many viewers as presented in these threads. Naturally, I bore all the expenses and have nothing to show for my effort.  (And the coin, re-encapsulated, was quietly returned to the internet.  I don't know what to make of all this but readers will recall the remarks made on this subject by viewers as varied as Mark Feld and NevadaS&G.  I was refunded the entire amount minus one hundred dollars. Interestingly, this never would have happened to our seasoned veteran. He refuses to buy a coin unseen and out of hand.

  2. On 1/15/2021 at 1:33 PM, VKurtB said:

    I'm requesting an Alabama license tag for my car that acknowledges my Penn State loyalty.

    [QA used to turn up like a bad penny but no more.  Anecdotally, though I haven't been formally so much as wrist-slapped anywhere, I have apparently been banned from every coin Forum in the nation.]  All the best!

  3. On 11/15/2019 at 8:46 PM, Greenstang said:

    I believe to sell them in USA you have to have "COPY" stamped on them. Also you wouldn't be able to sell them on eBay whether they had copy stamped on them or not. 

    ***

    There is a company I like that creatively skirts the "COPY" requirement: Intagliomint. What they do is produce 100% silver coins of classic, well-known, highly coveted designs in various diameters and thicknesses. The artwork, while sometimes imprecise is as close as one can come to the real thing.

    Ever want to have a Fugio Cent or 1804 dollar to carry around with you? Now you can.

    And it's perfectly legal.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  4. The problem with 1804's is very simple:  virtually all have been found, all have been authenticated by the very best numismatists available over the years and each bears an irreproachable provenance. There is, of course, a chance however unlikely that previously unknown specimens have heretofore never come to light. Only time will tell. 

  5. 1 hour ago, Lem E said:

    I am wanting to say that I was watching the ANA seminar on counterfeit coins and the question of fake green beans came up and they said that CAC hasn’t run into that problem yet. Looks like that may not be the case anymore. Scary stuff, but I would probably never buy anything from Hungary anyway.

    I would.  If it was good enough for Borat to spend time in, it's good enough for me.

  6. On 1/24/2021 at 11:57 AM, BlakeEik said:

    2. If you want to own a coin with a certain grade, then buy the coin after it was graded.

    Sound advice, but not fool-proof.  I recently purchased, sight unseen, a coin certified at a high grade by A, from a reputable out-of-state dealer with instructions to forward it directly to B for cross-grading, which ultimately failed. So, who lost, and who won? I lost without ever having had the opportunity to take physical possession of a desirable coin. The dealer lost a twelve hundred-dollar sale and has some ethical considerations to consider. Which leaves B the clear winner considering all of the foregoing hinged on a simple yes or no answer. Considering all shipping and insurance and grading costs were assumed by me, this is a cautionary tale of how one collector lost something he never saw and never had. My concern for the OP is what if he resubmitted the 1964 Jefferson for reconsideration for regarding -- which from my vantage point makes little economic sense, and the coin is returned with the exact same verdict? Take solace in the fact you were left with something.

  7. 17 minutes ago, Hoghead515 said:

    Another thing I learned. I never knew back in those early years that we got our gold from so many countries.  I always thought that it was mostly mined locally. It came from all over. I learned so many things from this book already and I'm only on page 23. 

    Ah-h-h, another happy satisfied customer!  And authors truly appreciate positive feedback on their labors of love.

  8. I don't particularly like the tone of that second letter, ending with...

         "If you want one send 25c additional, otherwise your remittance will be returned."  

    Telephones, understandably, were new but costly. And I can well appreciate the value of a quarter, circa 1889/1890, but the gentleman's customer relation skills are clearly lacking.

    Last month a coin consortium in Europe unexpectedly raised their sale price [for, you know] after I had already transmitted a bank wire transfer at a cost to me of $50. and a currency conversion fee from USD to euros for an additional fee of roughly $25. I balked and they relented, unbeknownst to me, shipping the item and describing it as a "global discount."  (I later bought 20 euros in New York and airmailed it to them). They acknowledged receiving it but informed me they were unable to maintain it as a credit on my account -- or, in the alternative, keep it with my well wishes for the holidays, as I had graciously suggested.

    Maybe being accommodating to prospective buyers is against government policy -- or possibly illegal, but that is what I would have done.

    [I wonder what some of the rough-and-tumble guys who frequent this Forum would say?]

  9. No death knell here.  We are one big group of happy campers. Including me!  My notifications have been disabled. I cannot follow anyone. Anything I write is subject to review, delayed, deleted or disinfected.  Perfect for someone like me who doesn't take things personally. If I had known ahead of time that my one and only post would be placed on the internet for all the world to see -- perfectly legal and within NGC's rights -- I might have demurred, but the cat is out of the bag and I have to deal with it. I still can't get over the fact that my photo, posted on the PCGS Set Registry, magically appeared here now and for all eternity.

  10. 17 minutes ago, Hoghead515 said:

    Your hung on those roosters aren't ya. They are beautiful coins. Id love to own one, one of these days Do they mint them in silver or just gold. 

    Their appearance is deceptive. They contain less than one-fifth of an ounce of gold. My collection is "complete" but if higher grades were to become available as has happened last month after a one-year drought, I would have no choice but to negotiate a less than prohibitive price with the prospective seller. Judging by all the partial sets showcased on registries, it wouldn't be a stretch to say most are in over their heads.  And I am in way too deep to quit now.

  11. On 5/30/2020 at 5:25 PM, bsshog40 said:

    When you get an email with a discount code to get a membership for $12.50. I never submit but I figured, ya just never know. Lol

    Thanks NGC!

    [Discount, or no discount, if I ever abandon the left coast and relocate all my Roosters here, I will give credit where credit is due: the OP and all my bosom buddies at NGC and the Set Registry.]