Is it possible to somehow open a coin cache and replace the coin?
I don't know if it is possible, but could it happen? I bought a coin that I thought was overgraded, an 1851 quarter(a tough coin-worth the price i paid even though possibly overgaded) . It was a pcgs cache. When I went to break it out,I just twisted it with my hands and the case broke(or came apart?) easily right along the seem. I could have replaced the coin and resealed it. You could not tell it was cracked unless you looked real close and were inspecting the cache. I do not know if this was the case but i have my suspicions. Suppose someone took a thin saw and sawed a cache right along the seem? Replace a real coin with a counterfeit or altered date or added mint mark. Then reseal the cache. Possible? Thanks for any opinions on this.
Bob
Bob

0
Comments
Just saying
Best wishes,
Eric
Never heard a slab called a "cache". Is this a new term?
My icon IS my coin. It is a gem 1949 FBL Franklin.
<< <i>Sure it can happen and from your description, sounds like that's exactly what happened.
Never heard a slab called a "cache". Is this a new term? >>
I think that is what the earliest ANACS "slabs" ("wallets") were called back in the mid 80's.
Eric
<< <i>
<< <i>Sure it can happen and from your description, sounds like that's exactly what happened.
Never heard a slab called a "cache". Is this a new term? >>
I think that is what the earliest ANACS "slabs" ("wallets") were called back in the mid 80's.
Eric >>
Thanks. Learn something new every day.
My icon IS my coin. It is a gem 1949 FBL Franklin.
...just curious. was this from the bay?
bob
<< <i>...just curious. was this from the bay?
No. I bought it at a coin show.
Sorry no pics at this time. I think I kept it, but may have thrown it out. This happened a few years ago. I do not think the cache was a counterfeit. The coin is real and is in my collection.
Thanks, Bob
<< <i>Too much what if,maybe, and I don't really know in this to draw any conclusion now. Could it be possible it was a date and mint that is known to be softly struck and you mistook that to mean the coin was over graded? >>
No.
Sorry I did not mean this thread to be about that coin per se. I just wanted to know if it was possible to open a slab, replace the coin, and possibly be almost undetectable.
Hay, I just had a thought--can slabs be steamed open?
<< <i>Certainly can be done and likely has been done.... Cheers, RickO >>
Ditto here.
On occasion when I've cracked open a slab, I've seen the slab pop open at the seam once or twice.
Recipient of the coveted "You Suck" award, April 2009 for cherrypicking a 1833 CBHD LM-5, and April 2022 for a 1835 LM-12, and again in Aug 2012 for picking off a 1952 FS-902.
back when Silver ran up in the 1980's the Brown Box 1973 Eisenhower Dollars were worth many times what the other dates were selling for, probably close to $40 if not more. some unsavory collectors and dealers were prying open the cases and substituting the cheap 1973 Clad Dollar in its place.
-----another scam I've heard of but never seen is done with a Capital holder----two coins are used such as a 1916 Mercury Dime for the obverse and a common "D" mint for the reverse.
Empty Nest Collection