• When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.

Conder101

Member: Seasoned Veteran
  • Posts

    10,047
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    90

Everything posted by Conder101

  1. These show that there were 6 rev dies available, and that 4 rev were retained for use in 1878. Snow says that only one reverse has been identified as having been used for the business strikes and two obv dies. Could the second reverse and third obv die used have been the dies used for the proof coins? He is right that two obv and one rev is really too few for a mintage of 852,000 coins. If they were used for that many there should be a LOT of 1877 cents with the dies showing severe die wear. I can't recall ever seeing one that showed such severe wear.
  2. Yes I have seen twenty cent pieces with reeded edges, but they were reeded post mint to try and get them to pass as quarters. A couple even had the denomination effaced on the reverse to try and help with the deception. The twenty cent and quarter were very close in size and obverse design so passing a twenty cent as a quarter was probably a distinct possibility. Reeding the edge would make it even not likely.
  3. Possibly. Michael Wollcott in his book on the Nickel five cent pieces indicated that five pairs of 1913 dies were shipped to San Francisco before the orders came down not to do anything about the five cent pieces until the final work on the Indian head design was approved. (The Indian Head was still trying to satisfy the vending machine people and didn't come out until I believe February of 1913.) I can't say if that is right or not because I do not know what the source of his information was. I have not seen it from any other source.
  4. Neat candy machine, and for it's age it seems in decent shape.
  5. But 1969 S DDO cents are known with machine doubling on the mintmark. So doubling on the mintmark can't be used to dismiss the possibility of a 69 S DDO. You HAVE to check other places for the strong doubling that occurs on that coin. On the 69 S DDO yes, but there are other coins with doubled dies that don't show doubling on all the devices.
  6. Was there ever a military branch that DIDN'T insult the other branches?
  7. The 1913 liberty nickel dies were almost certainly destroyed after the end of 1912 along with all the 1912 dies.
  8. You are probably thinking of the 1950 D NICKEL, not the cent.
  9. If you were to use Registered mail you MUST use private insurance. Because while Registered mail is extremely safe for shipping within the US, once it leaves the country you can't guarantee the security measures and the MAXIMUM pay out by the post office if the package does get lost is $49. Doesn't matter what the declared value and postage fee paid was, $49 is it.
  10. Basically what you have is a one oz silver round. worth whatever the spot price of silver happens to be.
  11. And a GREAT many of them are only plated base metal. So they don't even have bullion value.
  12. There is a product called simichrome polish that will do that. Shines it right up, give it that "liquid metal" look, ruins the coins completely.
  13. I don't see a controversy, as David says it's been done before. In fact this kind of thing has happened several times The 1998, 99, and 2000 WAM cents are the same thing, a business strike obverse die paired with an unfinished proof reverse die. The 1969 and 70 dimes with the modified torch reverse are also business strike obv dies and unfinished proof rev dies.
  14. Appears to be a Venetian 1/4 Ducat either C# 38 or C# 62 dependin on what the initials are on the bottom of the other side. ZD is C#38, DG GAF or W would be C#62. Only problem is it should be 826 fine silver, I suspect a gold plated 1/4 ducat
  15. That's what I would suggest call customer service not accounting.
  16. Maybe NGC was closed for some reason and they couldn't get into the post office.
  17. Not interested. The only one I was interested in was the Peace dollar and only if they made a proof version. When they didn't I lost all interest. As a rule I don't do modern stuff, but if they had made the Peace in proof I was going to get one for my 20th century proof type set.
  18. New article, but those fakes first showed up around 2013 and there was an article or two about them then.
  19. They are mules. Coins made with dies that were not intended to be paired together
  20. Well Omega is the end so I guess it's expired. I also doubt there were dollars in the group from the 30's either.
  21. Sounds like a standard proxy bid. You enter your maximum bid and each time you are out bid the proxy raises your bid by one increment over the current bid until someone bids more than your maximum.
  22. I can't explain feed finger damage because as far as I can tell they don't have feed fingers. Of course I also can't understand how the planchet gets into the collar. The feed mechanism has them coming down from above edge to edge into the press. Some how they must fall sideways into the collar, are struck, are pushed out of the collar and fall out of the press. But it can't just be a matter of falling out of the press because at 13 coins per second the struck coin can't fall out of the way fast enough to get out of the way of the next strike. I really don't understand it.