What's PCGS looking for here...or what am I missing?...caution those w/dial-up
FinallyHere
Posts: 821 ✭✭✭
This is without a doubt one of the nicest Merc dimes we've seen and certainly one of finest for the date. Wonderful luster, rich frost, a truly superb strike, pretty original and light pastel toning and great overall eye-appeal. So.....what's PCGS seeing that they will NOT grade this a 66FB? I don't expect you to grade from images so this is more or less a venting thread!!
Thanks for allowing me to vent!
Thanks for allowing me to vent!
0
Comments
Looks like a 65FB to me.
Cameron Kiefer
Harlan J. Berk, Ltd.
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Cameron Kiefer
darn nice dime - from the picture it looks FB period. If I saw the dime as shown WITHOUT knowing it was from you I'd say it's 65FB, and a damn nice example. I can see it as 66FB too, in your hands! Great skin and luster. I will admit I am confused to say the least to see PCGS did NOT grade it FB. I would say instead of cracking it out (waste of $ take it to LB and get an opinion from DH himself. You're not the type to get stung like that regardless it will end up in a FB holder.
Looks like a twin to my 20-D .
Marc
Certainly an ultra high end MS-65FB is obvious to anyone even if not in a 66FB slab.
First POTD 9/19/05!!
Kudos to the Mike, and kudos to the forum.
...recognition of the expertise within.
The band is beautifully split too. Most full band coins don't have a band anything like this and are imo, NOT deserving of a FB rating.
Would concur that eventually this will get into a 66 holder and even up to a MS67 holder at NGC. Old timers like us really appreciate nice luster under beautiful orig toned surfaces. But there is a new breed out there today who want vibrant luster that is not filtered one iota through toning. Hence a double-dipped blazer with 10% of the luster acid-stripped, gets the same rating as a coin like this that has never been touched.
Great coin.
roadrunner
Marc....yeah it's a full band....if PCGS missed hat aspect we'd all be in serious trouble.....
Android and Orville....thanks for the positive feedback!!
And Roadrunner......I think your most unfortunate and sadly accurate statement kind of sums it up. What a shame eh? Marc....be SO glad you have some of the wonderful coins you have!!
A great weekend to all!! I'm outa here for a day off with my wife and NO kiddies!!!
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Darn Nice Coin.
Ken
a dealer finally starts a thread and then ups and go's with his wife and no kids in tow - sounds so unusually super
When you get back do post again will ya Mike - maybe some of the wannabe's can get some tips from a staright A guy
Marc
edited for typos
How about my 20-D, which they put in a 64FB holder:
I compared this coin to about 14 66FB's I have and it looks the same, yet after a resubmital they still put it in to a 64-FB holder. I might need to crack it out and send in raw -- not in a PCGS holder so they're not predisposed to the grade on the submission paper.
Anyway, you have a nice looking coin -- looks a great deal like my 24-S, which I've submitted 3 times for regrading and keeps coming back 64FB. David Hall even wrote me a note last time saying that he LOVES the hammered out/full of luster reverse of the 24-S, and that the obverse is clean with no nicks/abrasions, but "I don't think the pattern of the toning on the obverse adds to the aesthetic value of the coin...and generally speaking the toning on the obverse is unattractive". What kind of reasoning is that!!!!! What if the guy/guys are color blind!
Anyway, to conclude my psychotic rant/rave -- when it comes to the key dates, these coins need to walk on water and raise the dead...or you really need to get lucky
I have a 21-D and 23-S in grading right now myself (from that raw collection I picked up) -- I'll let you know whether PCGS thinks they walk on water/raise the dead, whether I got lucky or whether I got skunked.
Mike,
I'm not a merc dime guy so I can't comment much on the grading issue. I just wanted to hijack this thread and say that the images are AWESOME!
Jack
a few new coins on the old website.
Camelot
You said:
<<<<<<<<great weekend to all!! I'm outa here for a day off with my wife and NO kiddies!!!>>>>>
Hmmm, those who forget their history are going to repeat it!!!!!
Check out my PQ selection of Morgan & Peace Dollars, and more at:
WWW.PQDOLLARS.COM or WWW.GILBERTCOINS.COM
A few key tics in the wrong places and you have a 64. But more importantly, the bands on the 2 coins, and the strike in general, is night and day. I would personally not consider the 64 coin a true FSB. If you lose sight of the center spilt at any angle, you're missing something. The scan shows this very clearly. Maybe another reason why they didn't assign a 65FB grade. I'm not a Merc expert however.
roadrunner
I agree with Larry (PQ Dollars) from another thread -- it's a crapshoot most of the time, but after a while you do learn how they grade...leading to less surprises. Although I recently had a batch of coins sent in, and thought one of them was a 63FB (or should I say I wouldn't expect PCGS to holder it in anything other than a 63FB...maybe a 64FB holder) and it came back a 65FB and one was a lock 65FB, and it came back a 66FB. Both coins sent in raw with really nice color. However, in the same batch was also a coin I thought was a lock 64FB, and it came back a 63FB. I don't know, the PCGS holder'd 63FB had more detail, better strike, less contact marks and more luster than the one they stuck in a 65FB holder, but perhaps they didn't like the toning on it and so no 64FB -- it went in to a 63FB holder.
I guess that's why they offer the re-grading service
Abe...I toldya.....I was with my wife without kids......I don't take my laptop with me for those kinds of extracurricular activities!! And besides....I highly doubt my wife would let me bring the camera.....
Hmmm, those who forget their history are going to repeat it!!!!!
Oreville.....I know...I know......don't worry though.....all is well....all is well.
I've come to the conclusion that it's not what we think the grade should be, it's trying to get to know how PCGS graders grade coins and what they're looking for in any specific grade.
Mercurydimeguy - This is really the issue and I'm glad you said it. However, that's NOT what grading is supposed to really be about now is it? A sound observation and more or less true.....for good or bad.
Jacktheknife - Thank you for your nice comments.
Fairlaneman (ken) - NO....there are NO wipes or hairlines but you are correct in your statements about how they treat them.
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Mercury dimes to me seems to be THEE most difficult series that I know of to grade. I have looked at hundreds of 1916-d's from 63 to 65. And most times, I don't see a difference! It scares me. My own instinct is getting good with Mercs though. When I first looked at Mikes 20-D, I thought 64FB because of the reverse, which IMO, had the branch and bands look worn and dented in some spots, (yeah sounds picky but I;m trying to figure out grading these), and the ONE on the reverse looks smashed down. But the obverse looks beautiful to me, and so I would have said 65FB. I have seen many 1916-d and 1942/41 mercs, and I USUALLY can tell immediately if it is a 66 or higher. The luster jumps out at you, with no issues, like whoever owned it, never moved it.
Michael, your 20-D seems a 64FB for sure, but it looks like it has a bit of wear - especially the reverse. But I see the luster. But I think M. Whitlows is better.
Brinkersmercs: Yours shows a lot of wear to me.
I have to start posting pictures, but I have something strange in my collection that I may never image, until I know what I want to do. I have the two (out fo two, unless there is more now) of a top pop 66FB key date mercury with NGC (I know, not PCGS), but one is incredible, and the other one???? I look at regularily, and have NO IDEA HOW IT MADE IT TO 66FB. I bought it a while ago, but when I look at that coin, I think - either a dealer paid NGC bucks or I have no idea how to grade these things!!! Probably the latter.
Mike, resubmit a year from now.
From a picture it would be difficult to grade the below, as their color/luster/strike is really dynamite but the toning subdues the strike/relief in a picture/photo. So, in hand they grade well but in photos -- well, one would have a hard time buying them at (or even one below) their "photo" PCGS slabbed grade. BTW -- I made all of these at PCGS by buying them raw...and by making a number of either all toned or all white coins at PCGS I've made the above observation -- PCGS will speank you for the "tween" toned coins
Grade -- MS66FB
Grade -- MS66FB
Grade -- MS66FB
Grade -- MS65FB
So, Mike, perhaps your coin is that "tweener" I'm referring to and that's why they aren't putting it in to a 66FB holder?
EDITED: -->> Oh, and I've rarely seen the light golden/yellowish Merc make it in to anything better than a 65FB holder
Link to Teletrade's Monday auction
Your's in comparions looks like a MS69 -- I only show this to demonstrate much of what we've discussed here...that grading is purely subjective and we can only learn by how PCGS has graded in the past to figure out what they'll do going forward.
Clearly, this is either the worst picture I've ever seen or this coin is XF -- at best -- and to Marc's point (in other threads) look at the holder and then look at the coin...they should be close and if not, and it is an undergader, snatch it up and hold for a while/resubmit later...or in the case of this 17-D, run away!!
Ken
Ken, very insightful -- so how do they determine is it a type 1 or type 2, and how they should grade it? I currently must have a type 1 in my set (64FB) because the strike is weak...although the coin does have some OK luster...however, I just sent one in that's REALLY hammered out hoping to get a 65FB out (much better than my current one). So if the one I just sent in is a type 2, are you saying that they'll say "oh, type 2" and also put it in a 64FB holder or do the type 2 coins become the 65FB's and 66FB's?
Curious -- shed some light on me as this is interesting
Here are the three types with the 1916 on the left 1917 in the middle and what most collectors see the type of 1918 on the right.
Ken
Very cool, Ken...so how do they grade them?
<< <i>Very cool, Ken...so how do they grade them? >>
To be real honest I have no idea. A 1916 or 1917 has never been sent in by myself. It would not surprise me if most graders know anything about this. Most die hard Merc collectors know about these changes but a average collector that just wants a example of the coin probably does not know about the changes either. I know for sure one guy at NGC does though. He wrote the book.
Ken
Al
i suggest you send it in on the $500 no bs line....they arent going to give you the grade on the regular $100 line
also....you need to send it when the mail guy isnt grading where they have a ceiling on the computer of 64 programed in to it
also...dont forget the market can only absorb 1 million a day in coins...after which all graders are sent home and the mail guy takes over....seeing as how 60 plus million have been absorbed at fun...i suggest you wait unitl march to send it in on the $500 line
monsterman
ps.....you didnt think they would give you all that money for a $100 bucks in fees did you....this is wallstreet now!!!
monsterman
out of rockets ...out of bullets...switching to harsh language
monsterman -- you're funny
But unfortunately (for us)....there is a bit of ironic truth in your comment.
graders spend what, 15 seconds on a coin?
compare this coin with some of your other graded coins at arms length
MM - You are a wise man....a wise guy sometimes too....but a wise man as well. Incidentally MM...remember...I play WITHOUT a helmet!! How about you??.......
Ken - Great insight and illustration as to the Mint's progression from Type of 16 through 18.
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