What does BU mean

I know it depends on the coin and i know BU means Brilliant Uncirculated. but does this normally mean AU 50 , 55, 58 MS 60,61,62? what is the norm when you see coins listed or forsale as BU. what should i be thinking ( besides buy slabbed you dummy.). just wondering
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Lowlife ripoff types will try to claim it means "borderline uncirculated", as in AU55/58.
Buffed Up
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<< <i>normally taken as ms63; gem BU is ms65 >>
I thought MS63 was Choice BU, MS65 Gem BU
choice and had very flashy luster. Such a coin would grade MS-62 or 63 but might apply
to some lower grade uncs.
Now days it may mean almost anything but it's best to figure a low grade unc. Sometimes
you'll see sliders or choice coins referred to as BU.
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<< <i>The coin is uncirculated and is not toned. It has no direct translation to the current MS system that is actually of any use. >>
Bingo. Also it does not say anything about whether the coin may have been toned at some time. Just that it is unc and that it is white. S without any other description treat it like you would a dipped MS-60.
Unfortunately today, if often means a slider.
roadrunner
MS60 to MS62 was just Unc - could be fugly to OK, but not high grade. Met the technical parameters for uncirculated (NO wear).
MS63 was BU
MS64 was Choice BU
MS65 was Gem BU
MS66-69 were whatever superlatives could modify "Gem"
MS70 was perfection - and virtually unheard of.
***Now we have SEGS, so MS70 is common
Hope that helps (BTW I got started in the late 1960's)
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Most often, the term was generic. I took it to mean (back then) that a coin was uncirculated and shiney.
I bought BU coins back then as a kid. I tried mail order.
One of them was a 1960 Small Date Cent, and another was a 1970-D half.
Oh yeah, I got what I paid for. The coins were uncirculated and shiney, but WOW!
They were really low end UNCs by todays standards.
DINGED......DANGED......DONGED.
I didn't care back then......surface details were not important at all.
And for a kid, they were affordable.
Pete
beat to hell/nicked up and a super slider unc. with little to sometimes no rub
silverandvinyl
WS
A coin that is Uncirculated but with too many distractions/ flaws to merit a grade higher than MS 63. JMHO
Seriously, when I see a coin described as BU, my first thought is that the coin should grade 63. But then I remember that it probably is a dipped slider that someone is trying to pass off as a gem.