Will this 1879 S Morgan make a ms65?
Trooper
Posts: 1,450 ✭
It's pretty clean with pl surfaces. Feilds are hit free. Theres a extremely small hit on the chin and one on the neck near the hair. But the big concern is the small scratch along the cheek. Just barely breaks the frost but is noticable. Reverse is slightly toned with no marks.
Will it make a 65?
Thanks ahead.
Tom
Will it make a 65?
Thanks ahead.
Tom
0
Comments
Russ, NCNE
The very clean field PL surfaces should get it a 65 (assuming the reverse does not pull it down a grade)... Is the reverse also PL? I've sene alot of "1-sided PL wonders" in 1879-S's
It's got a very pretty obverse...
Stuart
Collect 18th & 19th Century US Type Coins, Silver Dollars, $20 Gold Double Eagles and World Crowns & Talers with High Eye Appeal
"Luck is what happens when Preparation meets Opportunity"
Thanks for the comments. Here's a pic of the reverse. Yes it's pl but has a slight tone to it. The picture doesn't show the pl but it's there.
Since the toning on the reverse isn't that heavy would a quick dip take it off?
Thanks
Tom
<< <i>Since the toning on the reverse isn't that heavy would a quick dip take it off? >>
No friggin' way I'd dip that coin. It looks great just the way it is.
Russ, NCNE
<< <i>No friggin' way I'd dip that coin. It looks great just the way it is. >>
What my learned and emotional colleague said - that's a damn nice looking coin just the way it is.
It is nice the way it is and a good shot at 65.
FrederickCoinClub
<< <i>Nope, it is not a MS65 >>
Yes it is.
Russ, NCNE
The reverse looks (to me) like a borderline 64/65, but since they weigh the obverse grade 60%, it's a shot 65. Based on seeing the reverse, it may end up as a high-end MS-64 -- but still a shot 65 coin.
My personal preference (if you are considering getting it certified & slabbed) would be to save the grading fees for a coin that could have a higher commercial gain by being certified. I've bought loads of beautiful (shot-65) slabbed PCGS & NGC high-end MS-64's for $40-45 each, and have saved on grading fees since they were already slabbed
It will take you a bit of time, but try to find either a slabbed or raw 1879-S that looks like the obverse of yours on both sides of the coin
Stuart
Collect 18th & 19th Century US Type Coins, Silver Dollars, $20 Gold Double Eagles and World Crowns & Talers with High Eye Appeal
"Luck is what happens when Preparation meets Opportunity"
i know that i am not even remotely as good at grading coins as most of you but wouldnt that scratch between 12 O'clock and one running down through the U down to the head nock it down below a 65 grade?
john
Stuart
Collect 18th & 19th Century US Type Coins, Silver Dollars, $20 Gold Double Eagles and World Crowns & Talers with High Eye Appeal
"Luck is what happens when Preparation meets Opportunity"
stewart
i gotta get glasses man.
john
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Al
The only coins that should be dipped are those that have stubborn PVC, or those with just plain ugly toning. This toning is not ugly.
The coin was still in the cello when I took th obv pic. That is part of the holder that is distorting the obv by the "u".
Ok No dip and its going in the Eagle book.
Thank again all.
Tom
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.I can post pic if you want to see it...