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Moxie15

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Posts posted by Moxie15

  1. To some people the original government packaging means nearly as much as the coin. 

    If you are just trying to sell this keep all the paperwork, boxes, mailing packages, etc. If the holders are after market, such as a set of WWII nickles in a cardboard holder with a short write up or pictures and inside a plastic holder, or a set of Lincoln Memorial cents in a holder made to hang on the wall then value is minimal.

  2. In the last few years there have been numerous spectacular 'finds' and 'errors' showing up on the market that no one had seen before. Am I the only on that is standing here dumbfounded?

    Some of what I am talking about;

    1. 1794 "first struck' silver dollar

    2. dime struck on a nail

    3. quarter struck over Canadian quarter

    4. 1964 SMS coins

    5. 'Prototype' IKEs

    The list goes on.

    I have to admit that I am a devotee of the Apostle Thomas, I doubt everything.  As such I think every one of these 'Spectacular Finds' is at best overhyped and at worst totally make believe.  The closest thing I have to a motto is  I believe nothing, know little,and think a lot. I think #1 is an over hyped early strike but no way to say it is the first and #2 through #5 are so much fertilizer, am I the only one?

  3. Opinions, opinions, we rely on others opinions so much. Grading is an opinion we all know that. So whose opinion do you trust? 

    Everyone here has seen coins in both company's holders that we disagreed with the grade. Both companies have graded counterfeits as genuine, both companies have graded genuine coins as counterfeits, so what to do?

    I would start with a phone call to the first company to see if they would agree to a no cost second look. If they do not I would call the other to see if they would do the same. If not I would look to a third company or an industry accepted expert in the series. Is it moral to do nothing or sell them as is? I would say yes. The holder is the guaranty from the company, Is it immoral to sell a coin that NGC or PCGS graded MS 67  that you think is no more than MS65? 

    Grades are opinions of a certain grader or graders of a certain company at a certain time, so is the authenticity, nothing more.