Grade and price need to be known. If unslabbed by a major TPG they should just be considered as base value coins for the type. (Slabbing is costly and those are common dates.)
You need to pick carefully. The mintage is huge because the mint was running flat out to recoin the silver that had been loaned to Great Britain during the war. As a result, there are a lot of poorly struck coins out there - it was about making them, not making quality.
You see this in the population reports and pricing - PCGS has over 50K MS64s, but just under 7,200 MS65s and the price doubles. MS66? under 900, the price guide is $350 vs. $100 MS65. TopPop MS67 is $13,500 with just 33 coins.
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Probably not but knowing the grade, composition of the set (all three P-D-S?), services, and price would be useful.
Grade and price need to be known. If unslabbed by a major TPG they should just be considered as base value coins for the type. (Slabbing is costly and those are common dates.)
Good pictures will be necessary to give you any real help.... Cheers, RickO
That depends. Do you want to own a set of 1922 dollars?
You need to pick carefully. The mintage is huge because the mint was running flat out to recoin the silver that had been loaned to Great Britain during the war. As a result, there are a lot of poorly struck coins out there - it was about making them, not making quality.
You see this in the population reports and pricing - PCGS has over 50K MS64s, but just under 7,200 MS65s and the price doubles. MS66? under 900, the price guide is $350 vs. $100 MS65. TopPop MS67 is $13,500 with just 33 coins.
https://www.pcgs.com/coinfacts/coin/1922-1/7357
ANA 50 year/Life Member (now "Emeritus")
3 VF-AU circs for $40-$55 is fine.
thank to you all for the info ,, am still thinking