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Looks fake to me, bad lettering, uneven rims, weird execution of the details, etc. although why anyone would want to fake a Bay Bridge is beyond me. I suppose if you were trying to reproduce a complicated coin to perfect your process this would be a good one. Still the results are anything less than elegant. But, according to the seller, it is high grade! So maybe that is what a truly high grade one looks like and all of the MS 66, 76, etc are just not stuck correctly?
The OP's coin looks like a crude fake that anyone could tell for all the reasons given. The fields alone look terrible...the ten foot pole "look."
Now consider this:
The photo of the OP's coin is horrible. Compare the posting of the unknown coin with the sharp, detailed photo of the genuine example. If the original photo was that good we may be able to nail this one. IMO, coins that have been whizzed resemble the OP's coin. Design elements become crude and deformed as we see here.
C/F's in this series have been around for decades. A Bay Bridge C/F does not ring a bell so if this coin is a fake it is one of the newer efforts. If the coin's surface is original (as struck), than it probably is bad based on its appearance. If the surface is not, there is a good possibility the coin is genuine.
Retired Collector & Dealer in Major Mint Error Coins & Currency since the 1960's.Co-Author of Whitman's "100 Greatest U.S. Mint Error Coins", and the Error Coin Encyclopedia, Vols., III & IV. Retired Authenticator for Major Mint Errors for PCGS. A 50+ Year PNG Member.A full-time numismatist since 1972, retired in 2022.
Acid dipped, cleaned, whizzed, worn, or whatever. Not convinced it's fake. Though the some of the bridge suspension details don't seem to be visible inside the peripheral lettering.
Originally posted by: Insider2 The OP's coin looks like a crude fake that anyone could tell for all the reasons given. The fields alone look terrible...the ten foot pole "look."
Now consider this:
The photo of the OP's coin is horrible. Compare the posting of the unknown coin with the sharp, detailed photo of the genuine example. If the original photo was that good we may be able to nail this one. IMO, coins that have been whizzed resemble the OP's coin. Design elements become crude and deformed as we see here.
C/F's in this series have been around for decades. A Bay Bridge C/F does not ring a bell so if this coin is a fake it is one of the newer efforts. If the coin's surface is original (as struck), than it probably is bad based on its appearance. If the surface is not, there is a good possibility the coin is genuine.
I don't know much about whizzed coins other than what I've read here and there. How would whizzing create the orange peel surface and choppy waters found on this coin or the gross deformation of the Bay Bridge, particularly the cables?
Would sandblasting do this? I look at the contrast between the smoothness of the bear and the orange peel surface of the fields and think the bear was covered up while the fields may have been sandblasted. That might explain the cables being pushed over flat, the thinness of the lettering, and the scrapes on the ships and other devices.
Comments
What makes you think this is fake?
The surfaces are porous and the details lack sharpness.
It also doesn't look to be silver, in my opinion.
Lance.
--Severian the Lame
What makes you think this is fake?
The surfaces are porous and the details lack sharpness.
It also doesn't look to be silver, in my opinion.
and the cables are not straight under gay bridge.
Under the what?
--Severian the Lame
K
I'd think perhaps it may have some value if it is the former vs the latter.
Now consider this:
The photo of the OP's coin is horrible. Compare the posting of the unknown coin with the sharp, detailed photo of the genuine example. If the original photo was that good we may be able to nail this one. IMO, coins that have been whizzed resemble the OP's coin. Design elements become crude and deformed as we see here.
C/F's in this series have been around for decades. A Bay Bridge C/F does not ring a bell so if this coin is a fake it is one of the newer efforts. If the coin's surface is original (as struck), than it probably is bad based on its appearance. If the surface is not, there is a good possibility the coin is genuine.
The OP's coin looks like a crude fake that anyone could tell for all the reasons given. The fields alone look terrible...the ten foot pole "look."
Now consider this:
The photo of the OP's coin is horrible. Compare the posting of the unknown coin with the sharp, detailed photo of the genuine example. If the original photo was that good we may be able to nail this one. IMO, coins that have been whizzed resemble the OP's coin. Design elements become crude and deformed as we see here.
C/F's in this series have been around for decades. A Bay Bridge C/F does not ring a bell so if this coin is a fake it is one of the newer efforts. If the coin's surface is original (as struck), than it probably is bad based on its appearance. If the surface is not, there is a good possibility the coin is genuine.
I don't know much about whizzed coins other than what I've read here and there. How would whizzing create the orange peel surface and choppy waters found on this coin or the gross deformation of the Bay Bridge, particularly the cables?
It's a very strange coin.