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Am I hypercritical?
A couple of complaints about MS-70 coin quality. Am I a complainer?
two 2007-W, Burnished, First Strike, MS-70 ASE. I returned the first one because it had something spattered on it before encapsulation! Like the grader sneezed before sealing it up. That was an MS-70, the cert ended in 399. The company sent me another because I asked for an exchange. This I received yesterday.
I have taken to inspecting my coins now with a digital microscope because I noticed a gold AE with a bad scratch too late to return, so I have that pseudo MS-70 to pass off on someone else. Yes, I know that PCGS will exchange it because it is not MS-70 but the process seems to be rather costly. At any rate, that experience made me wary.
So I noticed right away that there were slight scratches on the top raised edge in two places (photo attached). One spot had been peeled back, a little bit of shard hanging there like it was sliced with a sharp knife (seen with my microscope). But both areas were visible as a serrated portion.
[URL=http://s67.photobucket.com/user/ccronan1ccronan/media/2007-W-FS-Burn-SAE-11490403-S_zpscb01e41d.jpg.html]
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Interestingly, the cert number was 403, I wonder if that was the same grader?
So am I too critical? What does MS-70 really mean? Nothing is ever perfect. The spattering, yes, that was not acceptable. But this serration or abrasion is tiny but visible. The curled shard is visible only under magnification.
So how perfect is MS-70? What is acceptable?
two 2007-W, Burnished, First Strike, MS-70 ASE. I returned the first one because it had something spattered on it before encapsulation! Like the grader sneezed before sealing it up. That was an MS-70, the cert ended in 399. The company sent me another because I asked for an exchange. This I received yesterday.
I have taken to inspecting my coins now with a digital microscope because I noticed a gold AE with a bad scratch too late to return, so I have that pseudo MS-70 to pass off on someone else. Yes, I know that PCGS will exchange it because it is not MS-70 but the process seems to be rather costly. At any rate, that experience made me wary.
So I noticed right away that there were slight scratches on the top raised edge in two places (photo attached). One spot had been peeled back, a little bit of shard hanging there like it was sliced with a sharp knife (seen with my microscope). But both areas were visible as a serrated portion.
[URL=http://s67.photobucket.com/user/ccronan1ccronan/media/2007-W-FS-Burn-SAE-11490403-S_zpscb01e41d.jpg.html]
[/URL]Interestingly, the cert number was 403, I wonder if that was the same grader?
So am I too critical? What does MS-70 really mean? Nothing is ever perfect. The spattering, yes, that was not acceptable. But this serration or abrasion is tiny but visible. The curled shard is visible only under magnification.
So how perfect is MS-70? What is acceptable?
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Comments
-Paul
Under magnification those marks are on the coin not the plastic. But something like this is acceptable for MS-70? What is permitted, really.
Chuck
<< <i>Why not buy a nice 69 and save tons of money? >>
Never let logic interfere with marketing.
RMR: 'Wer, wenn ich schriee, hörte mich denn aus der Engel Ordnungen?'
CJ: 'No one!' [Ain't no angels in the coin biz]
Chuck
Here's the thing, you need to understand what a graded 70 coin really is. There is the theoretical 70 (perfect, as struck) and then there is the real 70. Particularly on SAEs.
Once you understand it, you will understand if it is worth the premium (ie...registry points and a slightly higher price) or if, as TDN says, you should just get the 69 instead.
As far as using a digital microscope......again, learn what a grading opinion is and what they use to grade with. If you use a microscope, then, yes, you will find issues with almost any coin.
I've been told I tolerate fools poorly...that may explain things if I have a problem with you. Current ebay items - Nothing at the moment
So yes, I believe you are hypercritical.
Coin Rarities Online
And TDN - maybe he collects 70's - he isn't alone whether it is marketing or not some modern collectors pursue these. Why don't you collect sliders and save yourself a ton of dough?
It's the same marketing CAC uses, and the same marketing PCGS used to jump start the recon program (which is effectively watering down the product and admitting PCGS made enough mistaken opinions during the initial grading process (and don't tell me it's all gradeflation .. BS -- many coins sent through recon have successfully ugraded that were housed in 3 prong/fade holders) .. The collector gets to send his coin in and pay for PCGS failure to grade correctly the first time ... Or is it more accurate to say they have a different OPINION this time since that is really all we buy .. PCGS=Public company with a board of directors seeking corporate profits .. It is a conflict of interest to charge commissions on upgrades when PCGS failed to grade it right the first time. Bologna on that and it leads to many collectors feeling the product is watered down ...
The OP is not pursuing classic coins and not interested in the same material as the tight circle of the same 10 or 20 people here in the good ole boys club who all band together and speak with the forked same tongue
<< <i>I think if you examine coins with a microscope like this you will discover that none of them are actually perfect, and you will drive yourself crazy in the process.
So yes, I believe you are hypercritical. >>
Which is exactly why MS70 should've remained a hypothetical grade and MS69 should be the highest grade attainable. There is no such thing as a flawless coin.
I notice on the one I photo'd that only one edge was ragged.... flip it over and the inside edge on that now top portion was fine.
With all due respect, I don't examine my coins with a microscope. If one does so, one is going to find flaws. If flaws bothers one, then one may as well collect 69s which also have flaws and save a whole lot of money. In either case, one is going to be dissatisfied with the coin, but in one case one has more money in the bank.
so far that # has not been given out.
No, you are not overly critical. If you can't find a flaw with 5 power after 5 minutes of looking. That's about as flawless as you''re ever going to get.....well, at least looking through a plastic slab. Who knows what lurks in those
areas you cannot see. An near flawless today doesn't mean spots or other issues can't show up on the coin down the road.
prevalent with coins that get graded in bulk, not to mention a lot more irritating on coins that are supposed
to be "flawless".
I suppose I will let it go with this very educational discussion (really, not a sarcastic comment). In my web searching since this started, it appears that there is a second "checker" to confirm the grade. However, that spattered coin had the spatter across the face of the coin, not on the capsule. That does not make sense to me. Here it is, I have it no more.
[URL=http://s67.photobucket.com/user/ccronan1ccronan/media/Picofreturned2007-WBurnished_zps54fef1e1.jpg.html]
<< <i>And that was visible without magnification. >>
I have 3 or 4 spotters myself in 70 holders. I try to stay away from them if the premium is significant.
<< <i>My understanding is that an MS70 coin shows no imperfection at 10X magnification. Certainly a microscope provides much higher magnification which is great for examining larvae but lousy for coin grading. >>
So you're suggesting that every ASE that comes out of bulk MS70 submission gets a 10X look? I don't know about that. If they graded them via 10X they'd find something negative on every one of them within 5-10 seconds
<< <i>
<< <i>My understanding is that an MS70 coin shows no imperfection at 10X magnification. Certainly a microscope provides much higher magnification which is great for examining larvae but lousy for coin grading. >>
So you're suggesting that every ASE that comes out of bulk MS70 submission gets a 10X look? I don't know about that. If they graded them via 10X they'd find something negative on every one of them within 5-10 seconds >>
When mint state and proof 70 graded coins were the rage a decade ago, often selling for 10x the 69 equivalent, my understanding was the 10x threshold. Criteria may have changed, but that seemed to be the retort to those that spoke of "perfect" coins.
Don't see a loupe in this fellows hand, though the licorice is nearby.
The gasket shown will fit first spouse gold. Tha ASE gasket has the same outer diameter but larger inner diameter. The hard plastic slab is universal for most mint struck coins. The way they fit different sized coins inside is with different gaskets.
The ragged edge on the inside of the gasket will lay over the rim. You said it yourself, the ragged bit of plastic on the gasket will lay on the coin's rim. and yes, the o-ring gasket is perfectly placed in the hard slab because the slab would not close and seal otherwise.
<< <i>And that was visible without magnification. >>
And, now you should do forum searches on "milk spots" on the SAEs....
I've been told I tolerate fools poorly...that may explain things if I have a problem with you. Current ebay items - Nothing at the moment
Just my eversohumble opinion.
Cheers,
Bob
<< <i>
<< <i>Why not buy a nice 69 and save tons of money? >>
Never let logic interfere with marketing.
I have many 69s that seem to have no problems. Sometimes I wonder how they are graded.
they do fit perfectly inside.
The leaner gasket is a first spouse. Those below are a $5 gold eagle, a $25 gold eagle and a $50 gold eagle.
The gasket system hold the coins securely and allows for 1 size hard plastic slab to hold multiple sizes of coins.
If you are buying specifically for a modern coin registry set, the only thing that matters is the number grade on the slab – the coin is completely secondary. If, however, you are building for a personal pursuit of "perfect" coins then a) get ready to tick off a lot of dealers having to handle your returns; b) learn to live without perfection so you don't alienate the known universe of coin dealers or; c) give it up.
In honor of the memory of Cpl. Michael E. Thompson
<< <i>No, you are not overly critical. If you can't find a flaw with 5 power after 5 minutes of looking. That's about as flawless as you're ever going to get.....well, at least looking through a plastic slab. Who knows what lurks in those
areas you cannot see. An near flawless today doesn't mean spots or other issues can't show up on the coin down the road. >>
Isn't the rule: 5x Loupe + 5 Seconds per coin?
The name is LEE!
I'll send you a cracked slab and gasket to play with if you PM your address.
``https://ebay.us/m/KxolR5
All of that said, coins often "turn" in the holder - sometimes months or years after grading. The grading process isn't 100% accurate and this is, IMO, especially true of moderns which are often graded in enormous bulk submission lots.
NGC registry V-Nickel proof #6!!!!
working on proof shield nickels # 8 with a bullet!!!!
RIP "BEAR"
<< <i> No other grade will leave you feeling empty as often as MS70 >>
Lots of wallets have been left empty as well.
You wondered why I used a microscope. This thread is too long already, but I am going to start a new one: "Am I hypercritical2? I will display the original problem that has made me inspect so closely.
Thanks.