Home Buy, Sell, & Trade - U.S. Coins

1932-S Washington Quarter EF40 with interesting planchet flaw, for auction on ebay...now at $0.01!

Ladies and gentlemen, we have an auction currently running upon which we'd like to invite you to come place a bid. Up for auction is a 1932-S Washington Silver Quarter Dollar in EF40, with nice overall looks, solid EF details, and a small lamination break to left of Washington's nose. Those of you who are quarter collectors probably already know that the 1932-S quarter is the lowest mintage in the series, and also the first year of issue after the end of the Standing Liberty quarter.

This coin is described on ebay as having a "minor" planchet flaw but that's mostly because I ran out of space in my ebay title. I think "interesting" is a much better word (but it wouldn't fit)! This is a feature on the coin that for me did nothing to take away from the pleasure of holding and viewing this coin while at my desk. I would very much like to see this key date coin go to someone working on a Washington quarters set, and if you think you can get a deal on it, then be our guest. Ninety nine percent of the time we run our auctions starting at 1 cent, which guarantees that a fair price is paid and also, you have a chance to put in a bid and get a steal if too many ebayers are caught sleeping.

And it's more exciting for us, frankly. =) If you win this auction and you read this post, drop me a line and say hi, maybe I'll send you a free pad of Post-It Notes from our office right here in beautiful Carson City.

Our Ebay Page

Nick
ebay@brokencc.com

Comments

  • What I find interesting is you trying to pawn off a Coin Vault slab as a

    Sample slab




    Herb
    Remember it's not how you pick your nose that matters, it's where you put the boogers.
    imageimageimage
  • No, not at all. That was an erroneous listing that we took down. We deeply regret any confusion this may have engendered with our Sample Slab collectors. Those of you who read our posts regularly know that we're not in the business of "pawning off" coins to turn a quick profit that cheats honest collectors. My bosses are two of the good guys in the business, and I am proud to work for Aaron Ware and Allen Rowe. Northern Nevada Coin is in the business of working with high-quality rare U.S. coins, and securing the right coin for our collectors. In fact, one of the reasons we tend to carry coins that are certified only by two companies is so that consumers know *exactly* what they are getting and that they are getting the product they want. We are very choosy about the products we carry. We tell people about our 15 day return policy all the time, because we are not interested in sticking our customers with an item they have second thoughts about. Our coins are too good for cheap tactics like that.

    Herb, I want to thank you for taking the hobby so seriously. Without input from individuals like yourself, there would be no checks and balances against bad dealers or deceptive practices in coin collecting.
Sign In or Register to comment.