I took pictures of the ms65 on the right and ms62 on the left then I flipped the positions ms65 on left and ms62 on the right. I did this for both the obverse and reverse in the same location so lighting will be constant.
Assuming Ngc grades are correct I believe this is a good comparison of the difficulty I always had with grading raw peace dollars.
I took pictures of the ms65 on the right and ms62 on the left then I flipped the positions ms65 on left and ms62 on the right. I did this for both the obverse and reverse in the same location so lighting will be constant.
Assuming Ngc grades are correct I believe this is a good comparison of the difficulty I always had with grading raw peace dollars.
How can you compare a 62 to a 65, they are miles apart to get an accurate analysis.
Looks a whole lot better in the new photos. Luster on the '21 is qualitatively different than on the other issues in the series. It's often a bit hard to figure out from photos. Am I seeing a wheel mark on the MS62 coin just above the date?
Comments
Kove: I agree with your suggestion.
I took pictures of the ms65 on the right and ms62 on the left then I flipped the positions ms65 on left and ms62 on the right. I did this for both the obverse and reverse in the same location so lighting will be constant.
Assuming Ngc grades are correct I believe this is a good comparison of the difficulty I always had with grading raw peace dollars.
I have no problem with the NGC grades, including the MS65. It should be tried at cac.
How can you compare a 62 to a 65, they are miles apart to get an accurate analysis.
Looks a whole lot better in the new photos. Luster on the '21 is qualitatively different than on the other issues in the series. It's often a bit hard to figure out from photos. Am I seeing a wheel mark on the MS62 coin just above the date?