Best Of
Re: MBA Digital Diamond Review /Update 8/20…36/59…Season Ending Batting Average .610
There are a lot of people that are hesitant on purchasing older labelled cards. I can see this product as a way to ease some minds.
Re: MBA Digital Diamond Review /Update 8/20…36/59…Season Ending Batting Average .610
I believe it is a tiered charge based on the value of the card. '51 Mantle costing more than '61 Mays. I'd ballpark it around $3000 or so. Obviously, a play to increase value.... more power to you. Hope you hit 50% or better on the diamond reviews.
Re: Are slabs air tight?
You can buy and use small polyethylene bags with a zip-lock closure which are somewhat airtight for storage of individual slabs that have the added benefit of protecting the slab from scuffing.
1865 3 Cent Nickel - heavy clashing
While I know clashing is fairly common on 3 Cent Nickels, this one seems to far heavier than most. Interesting coin.

Re: The Confederation Medal 🇨🇦
Really like those deep relief medals, they show so much detail
Re: The Confederation Medal 🇨🇦
The whole Wyon family was talented, but this is one of the better efforts from the younger Wyons that I have seen. Very nice and in amazing condition.

Re: PCGS Auction Prices Sort not working
Like @alaura22 , I’ve also noticed for quite some time the results are not in date order, and when you click on “Date” to try to get it in order, nothing happens.
Steve
ANA Day 2
I apologize for the redundancy but thought it best to make daily reports. On Wednesday I was at the OKC CC by 7:30 am. I went right to Heritage lot viewing at 8 am, picked up my lots from a previous auction, and then to the bourse. Before going to my table, I did the rounds to get some buis and chatting done. I had a nice chat with Doug and Irma Winter and ordered his new edition of Gold Coins of the New Orleans Mint. I already have every edition, and actually 2 copies of the last edition, but the updates are important. Doug and I discussed the current challenges of obtaining cool gold coins for inventory, and it was nice to hear that we are all having the same issues with this, even the leader in the field with more networks is facing this issue. Doug and I discussed my 1837 half dime in MS65 I won from Heritage. Doug liked it and believed if could go 65+ if I wanted to try a regrade. I won’t but always nice to hear what the true legends think of my offerings. We also discussed our beloved Trail Blazers and the weather in PDX, about the only person on the planet I get to have such conversations with. Always a pleasure.
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Then to Great Collections to talk to Andy about my next submission, and chatted with Ian about how things were going and how happy I was with the results of my last submission, and how I can’t say enough about Phil and his teams images (Great Photos). We talked alot about the imaging and what their challenges are going forward to sustain this as GC continues to grow. But suffice to say Ian and GC are on it and always good to chat with them.
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The next stop was the CAC booth to discuss shipping on my next CACG submission. My timing for receiving them back is bad bc of more travel. But of course with their best in the buis Customer Service, we worked it out and they told me to just to put notes about when to ship on the submission form and they will follow through. Hey when the folks that run shipping and submission are right there to talk to you at the show, things can get done. Earlier they also brought to my table a sample slab with the OK quarter and a new CAC slab box (thanks). I noted to them that these boxes are great, but PCGS slabs are slightly larger and make it hard to open the boxes when they are in them. They said ‘ah but we already fixed that issue on the first version, so this new box will be okay with that’. Love these guys.
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Then to my table, and from 8:30 AM to 5:30 PM I had one 30 second break to PM my wife. I never had a chance to eat, I think I took one or two sips of water from my bottle all day. Even at 5:30 when I left for dinner with a friend, things we still going at my table. Can’t complain, great coins were walking up and I bought some, great coins were leaving my table with some happy customers. I am lucky to be on the row with some of big guys in early US coins - CRO, Eye Appealing, Dave Wnuck, Perkins to name a few. My table is in line with CRO and Wnuck, and Dave and I had some nice conversations at the edge of our tables when we both had brief pauses.
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I will end here with one fun story. About 11-ish, one of my friends and a fine numismatist showed me what he had left to sell. He was selling alot of his core collection and they were all uber coins. He showed me a coin I always wanted to have in my bust quarter collection. Not just a date and type, but that coin, the one and only. Is it an 1820 Medium O, B3, Bust Quarter, in MS64 with a stunning and vibrant color palette. In the bust quarter community, we all know that coin. My first exposure to it was in the legendary Newman sale that Heritage had abit more than a decade ago. In that sale it was in an NGC 64 holder with the special labels for the Newman collection. I don’t recall whether it was CACed or not at that time. It went for around $29K which was way beyond my means, but I at least enjoyed viewing it. But it is a well-known example in the bust quarter community bc of its extraordinary eye appeal. Then about 2 years ago, it popped up for sale on a major dealers website. A friend on these boards and I had lengthy PM’s about what its value was and what an offer should be if he were to go for it with this dealer. I think at the time we came to a reasonable value. He then asked me to view it for him at the dealers table at Winter FUN the next week to verify again the colors I saw back in the day etc. I reported back that yes it is everything we see in the new images. However, it sold before that friend could buy it. So here I am at my table yesterday and my other friend pops it out and says he is selling it. I thought ‘oh so your were the one who bought it from XXX dealer’ which he said yes. It is now in a CACG MS64 holder:
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So I looked at his ask and thought - ‘I should buy it for my BQ collection, what the heck’. So asked him if he would take a check for slightly less than his ask, and he said yes. So this amazing coin was mine and was going to be one of the major highlights of my collection, yippee!
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Ah but wait. One of the major die marriage and PQ bust quarter collectors was standing there while this went on. He asked me if I would sell it to him. I said I really wanted it for my collection, but I also recognized what he was building and it was a hard thing for me to do. He persisted, and alas, flipped it to him for a 3% fee over what I paid. Since I am a dealer now, it was the right thing to do even though it was very very hard. But hey, I owned it for 30 minutes!!!!@!@! And now it is placed into a lifelong and growing collection that could end up being one of the, if not the best full bust quarter die marriage collections ever. So I did a good thing there I think.
So FUN things can happen at ANA. Thanks for reading.
Best, DM

Re: American Eagle 2025 One Ounce Silver Coin - Laser Beam Privy Mark
@jmlanzaf said:
What was the privy? I don't remember that.
An eagle head.
Re: American Eagle 2025 One Ounce Silver Coin - Laser Beam Privy Mark
@Onastone said:
@jmlanzaf said:
@bigmountainlion said:
Canada mint started selling coins with privy more than 30 years ago.The Romans used them 2000 years ago. The UK mint has used them for centuries.
So is this really a new thing for US coinage? Are there any other coins besides 2020's V75? Was that the start here?
The first use of it was the arrows at the date in the 19th century, I think. The Grant with star would be another instance.
You could also argue that mint marks are a form of privy mark. They were usually symbols, but indicating the Mint of origin was one of the uses of them.