Die polish lines on Morgans - Good or Bad?
mdwoods
Posts: 5,546 ✭✭✭
I am looking at a very nice Morgan dollar on approval. Great strike, a few very minor marks. At first glance, under a 2X magnifier, there appears to be some fine scratches, especially on the reverse. However, under closer magnification, it is revealed that these lines are raised from the surface, indicating to me that the coin was struck from nearly new, or repolished dies. The strike is so crisp that I think that the dies must have been nearly new. What do the experts think about the appearance of die polish lines on a coin. At first I found them unsettling, but when I figured out what they were, it doesn't bother me, at least that much. Are die polish lines common on Morgans? They are nearly invisible without magnificaton, and not really bothersome with it. I suppose it is a personal taste sort of thing. Like luster versus strike. Just thought I would get a few knowledgeable opinions from the "oldtimers". Thanks, Mark
P.S. The coin is in a PCGS MS67 holder. Nice luster, great strike. very good eye appeal, IMO.
P.S. The coin is in a PCGS MS67 holder. Nice luster, great strike. very good eye appeal, IMO.
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Comments
Die polish is on every coin to different levels. Depends on date/mint as to how visible it is on morgans. Some have much more than others.
We'll use our hands and hearts and if we must we'll use our heads.
You mean like the "characters" on this Forum?
It is an exceptionally clean coin for a big silver coin. mdwoods
We'll use our hands and hearts and if we must we'll use our heads.
i would need to see the coin in person to know for sure
for example
i suppose if the coin is a rare date like a 94 s morgan in a 65 holder and the die polish lines are on the reverse and they are much less than normally seen and the coin has excpetional eye appeal thern it would not matter to me
but being in a 67 holder it would need to have many other monster extraordinary attributes to be in a 67 holder with these noticeable die polishing lines and again this coin needs to be sight seen to give you a real opinion on the coin
sincerely michael
Ogden
We'll use our hands and hearts and if we must we'll use our heads.
btw, several of the classic commem's are notorious for heavy die polish. missouri, some years of the boone's, pilgrim, spanish trail come to mind. easy to mistake for cleaning.
K s