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Coolest ebay item in a long time!!!!!!!!!!

"You keep your 1804 dollar and 1822 half eagle -- give me rainbow roosies in MS68."
rainbowroosie April 1, 2003

Comments

  • SeattleSlammerSeattleSlammer Posts: 10,002 ✭✭✭✭✭
    image
  • Wolf359Wolf359 Posts: 7,656 ✭✭✭
    Pretty wild. Are they glued to the glass? Looks like it with that wierd AT-looking toning.
  • rainbowroosierainbowroosie Posts: 4,874 ✭✭✭✭
    Do you think you could smash out the coins??? Hard to tell how they are sitting from the photo??.....This is one time when I wish I had real money so I could just buy it and not worry about anything except that it "looks really cool!"image
    "You keep your 1804 dollar and 1822 half eagle -- give me rainbow roosies in MS68."
    rainbowroosie April 1, 2003
  • it reminds me of that toilet seat cover someone posted awhile ago.
    The Wegner ARRC Bingle Set

    Looking for 1967 PCGS/NGC slabbed coins.
  • relayerrelayer Posts: 10,570

    I wonder if these qualify as market-acceptable natural toning image
    image
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  • BearBear Posts: 18,953 ✭✭✭
    Of course its natural toning. Is there any other kind?
    There once was a place called
    Camelotimage
  • StoogeStooge Posts: 4,665 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I was in Vegas a few years back and went into a store on the strip and they had a clear plexi-glass toilet seat and cover with new Lincoln cents all throughout the inside of the seat. I thought that it was kewl! Not for $400 though.

    later, Paul.

    Later, Paul.
  • MonstavetMonstavet Posts: 1,235 ✭✭
    That is pretty interesting. Looks like some may be damaged or have glu on them or something. Cool the way the toning has crept in from the edges so that the outermost coins are heavily toned and the one in the center is almost untouched. I guess that is from years of cigarette smoke exposure? Interesting item...would be fun to get a closer look.
    Send Email or PM for free veterinary advice.
  • mnmcoinmnmcoin Posts: 2,165
    As the seller says they are in lucite, I believe it would be impossible to remove the coins successfully. I believe lucite is sort of like an apoxy (sp) which would bond together with the coin, in effect, sealing the coins completely. I have a 1953 proof set with absolutely gorgeous coins, all look PR68. I bought it a long time ago, with the intention of being able to sell it to my father (a large proof set dealer). My father saw the set and said no, that sets like that are not marketable as a proof set anymore.

    With that being said, I think that is a very cool item, but if anyone plans on buying it, don't buy it with the idea of being able to crack all the coins out. Buy it as the cool item that it is.

    morris <><
    "Repent, for the kindom of heaven is at hand."
    ** I would take a shack on the Rock over a castle in the sand !! **
    Don't take life so seriously...nobody gets out alive.

    ALL VALLEY COIN AND JEWELRY
    28480 B OLD TOWN FRONT ST
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  • pontiacinfpontiacinf Posts: 8,915 ✭✭
    mn is right, the coins are irretriveable and im sure the lucite bonding to the silver has damaged them conciderably...the seller knows these cannot be retrieved.
    image

    Go BIG or GO HOME. ©Bill
  • Seller states:
    THE INSERT IS TWO PIECES OF LUCITE OR PLEXIGLASS PUT TOGETHER WITH SILICON ADHESIVE. THE SILVER DOLLARS ARE WITHIN THIS SOFTER SILICONE LAYER.

    They could be retrieved from the silicone, but the damage has already been done, hence the "toning".
    Many silicone products contain acetic acid and similar chemicals that can cause corrosive reactions on various metals to include, but not limited to:copper, nickel, lead, brass, and silver.
    From the picture, it would appear that the white surfaces of the Morgans are the only portions that were not completely saturated by the compound.
    Ain't chemistry grand? image


    Craig
    The Rede we live by: If it harms none, do what you will.
    image
  • image
    "A happy person is not a person in a certain set of circumstances, but rather a person with a certain set of attitudes"--Hugh Downs
  • ms70ms70 Posts: 13,954 ✭✭✭✭✭

    And NGC thought they were so original & innovative with the multi-coin slab.....



    Spelling....AGAIN image

    Great transactions with oih82w8, JasonGaming, Moose1913.

  • BigGreekBigGreek Posts: 1,090
    Epoxy is dissolved by acetone. I've had coins which people have
    laquered with some nail polish (a polyeurethane epoxy). Acetone
    takes it right off.
    image
    Please check out my eBay auctions!
    My WLH Short Set Registry Collection
  • Conder101Conder101 Posts: 10,536
    For coins embedded in lucite I believe if you trim the plastic down close to the coin you can probably remove it using the liquid nitrogen method.

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