roll searching taught me how easy it is to re-fill them back up
thing that catches my eyes is the one side not crimped...it'd be sooooo easy to open that side use a pen to push um out then just drop um back in and not have to re-crimp the end...
if you bought these chances are...no return hope those stars n tha moon are aligned just right and score...
best of luck...update too
everything in life is but merely on loan to us by our appreciation....lose your appreciation and see
I remember getting OBW rolls from the bank back then. IMO this is not OBW, and if it is, it has been opened. Look at the end how cruddy the paper looks. OBW rolls should have crisp rolls on both ends
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Personally, I think it only matters if you paid or are considering paying a significant premium for the roll. Typically, these go for between $7 and $20 a roll. Some go for significantly higher.
Most folks buy them and open them looking for the 69S/69S and have little regard for actual grade of the coins within. (An MS66 69S can bring a healthy premium to the right seller.)
I'm of the opinion that the roll you've pictured has been opened but it means little unless your only purpose behind purchasing the roll was in hoping to find that one DD AND you paid a significant premium.
Something else to consider, it's possible that the seller of the roll has not searched it. It's also possible that the roll was searched 40 years ago. Regardless, it has been opened and there will NOT be any 69S/69S Lincolns within it.
High grade coins? Possibly. Die Clashed coins? Possibly. Minor Doubled Dies? Possibly. Die scratched low grade MS coins? More than likely!
You will find no doubled dies in that roll. Already searched.
You Suck! Awarded 6/2008- 1901-O Micro O Morgan, 8/2008- 1878 VAM-123 Morgan, 9/2022 1888-O VAM-1B3 H8 Morgan | Senior Regional Representative- ANACS Coin Grading. Posted opinions on coins are my own, and are not an official ANACS opinion.
<<At least it doesn't say "Carson City State Bank" on it.>>
That's what I was expecting.
Looks like an old roll that's about it. Big time key date/DDO roll and a hack job at one end, it's been searched. Sure would be funny if the searcher missed the DDO
Comments
has it been search
most likely
roll searching taught me how easy it is to re-fill them back up
thing that catches my eyes is the one side not crimped...it'd be sooooo easy to open that side
use a pen to push um out
then just drop um back in
and not have to re-crimp the end...
if you bought these
chances are...no return
hope those stars n tha moon are aligned just right and score...
best of luck...update too
big question here is...
if you sold a roll as unsearched...would you accept returns???
Most folks buy them and open them looking for the 69S/69S and have little regard for actual grade of the coins within. (An MS66 69S can bring a healthy premium to the right seller.)
I'm of the opinion that the roll you've pictured has been opened but it means little unless your only purpose behind purchasing the roll was in hoping to find that one DD AND you paid a significant premium.
Something else to consider, it's possible that the seller of the roll has not searched it. It's also possible that the roll was searched 40 years ago. Regardless, it has been opened and there will NOT be any 69S/69S Lincolns within it.
High grade coins? Possibly.
Die Clashed coins? Possibly.
Minor Doubled Dies? Possibly.
Die scratched low grade MS coins? More than likely!
Significant Premium Example
Insignificant Premium Example
The name is LEE!
WS
Keeper of the VAM Catalog • Professional Coin Imaging • Prime Number Set • World Coins in Early America • British Trade Dollars • Variety Attribution
60 years into this hobby and I'm still working on my Lincoln set!
That's what I was expecting.
Looks like an old roll that's about it. Big time key date/DDO roll and a hack job at one end, it's been searched.
Sure would be funny if the searcher missed the DDO