Which would you rather have?
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For two coins in the same series, a high grade common date coin or a rare date coin in a typical grade (both having the same current value).
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Come to think of it, there are too many other variables for me to give a clear-cut answer.
Obscurum per obscurius
Russ, NCNE
We'll use our hands and hearts and if we must we'll use our heads.
Frank
honi soit qui mal y pense
gold - the barbarous relic!
to let you know
as again it all depends and could go either way depending on many variables
sincerely michael
Greg Hansen, Melbourne, FL Click here for any current EBAY auctions Multiple "Circle of Trust" transactions over 14 years on forum
There are some coins where a key date in AG has the value of a common date in mid to high MS... I would certainly enjoy looking at the MS more, most likely... I'd have to see the coin to decide whether or not the rareness factor or condition gives it more value.
Jeremy
Joe.
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jom
K S
Russ, NCNE
another example, an 1802 half-dime in ag+ at $5G vs a ms-66, i'd take the ag coin.
K S
Other than a few moderns, the only coins I own in Mint State are my 3 cent nickels.
When we are planning for posterity, we ought to remember that virtue is not hereditary.
Thomas Paine
if i'm collecting by type i'll usually go for the high grade "more common" coin over the "less common" lower grade coin...if collecting by series and have decided on the acceptable lowest grade for the key coins needed that fits my $ budget (dirty six-letter word),i'll go with the "rarity" because my set is incomplete without the keys...
SVDB cents,'85 nickels,'16-D dimes,'32-D quarters,etc.,to name just a few keys needed to complete a series, are not rare...
if the question is whether i would select what i recognize (not necessarily what everyone else recognizes) as truly rare or truly scarce coin in a lower grade over a high grade known to be common coin,i will go with what i recognize to be true rarity/scarcity every time...
the time to buy a rare coin is when you see it...
i'm assembling a set of early Lincolns...i'm shopping for the '14-D at this time...'14-D's are readily available in the circulated grade i can afford and would be acceptable for this short set i'm trying to assemble for under a $1000...i'll go up to $200 for a nice chocolate colored,problem free '14-D...i will not go $200 for an uncirculated '14-P...i'm in no hurry to buy a '14-D but when i see the "right" one i'll be ready with my money...
Great spirits have always encountered violent opposition from mediocre minds.-Albert Einstein