Your opinion of this half eagle, please
shirohniichan
Posts: 4,992 ✭✭✭
Please give me your frank opinion about this coin. What do you think of its grade and appearance?
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According to my old PCGS pop report, there are at least 8 graded higher in PCGS holders. Supposedly there are 2 in MS-66 holders, 3 in 65, and 2 in 64. I'd be interested in knowing if one of the 64s got into a 66 holder and if the two 66s were formerly 65s. It could be that there's one 66 and someone failed getting it bumped to a 67. Who knows?
Anyway, the ANACS grader at Long Beach said he thought it had AU-58 details and said "Too bad" about the cleaning on the obverse. I wouldn't have been able to afford it if it were perfect.
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I think AU58 is rather generous. However, it's hard to tell without seeing it in person and deciding what is weak strike and what is wear.
Is it OK to like a coin that will never make it into a PCGS holder?
No. The coin is worthless. It might as well be a foreign coin. Only slabbable coins are worth anything. A coins value is based on the number of registry points it is awarded.
<< <i>Only slabbable coins are worth anything >>
And it has to be in PCGS holder...
"The silver is mine and the gold is mine,' declares the LORD GOD Almighty."
I am sorry but these old eye's are not picking up on the light cleaning on the obv. Can you point out to me where you see these traces of light cleaning please.
Thanks
"The silver is mine and the gold is mine,' declares the LORD GOD Almighty."
I don't know how PCGS and NGC grade rare dates like this that are not from the C and D mints. It's been my observation that both services routinely overgrade the southern mint coins by as much as 10 points. To put it other way, if you want a true AU coin you have to buy an MS-61 or 62. If you want an EF, you buy an AU and so on. If you want a true Unc. it's got to be graded MS-63 or more likely MS-64.
Will there be a piper to pay down the road for this? I wish I could answer that question.
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Sometimes I see better date Barber coins that are very conservatively graded in slabs. I wish that I could see common dates for type collectors that were so nice for the grade. But southern mint gold seems to be a whole other matter. Perhaps the great rarity of TRUE Mint State Charlotte and Dahlonega is the reason. Maybe the services feel that there is need have “Mint State” C and D coins on the market. The same situaiton exists for early U.S. gold coins. They are now routinely overgraded too.
Well if there are very few or NO Mint State Charlotte and Dahlonega coins for certain issues, that should be the way they are graded. Rarity should not change grading standards in either direction.
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