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"Trade Dollar heavyweights present plans for definitive guidebooks" Hopefully soon.

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  • alefzeroalefzero Posts: 975 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @OriginalDan said:

    @alefzero said:

    >

    I've studied the 76 II/II coins extensively, and if you look at a bunch of the proof examples, you'll see varying degrees of "doubling" on US of A lettering. My theory is this is an artifact of multiple strikes, not something present on the reverse die. You'll see some of these (same die) with zero "doubling" and others with quite a bit, and it can vary in location.

    Are you suggesting there's more than one II/II die pair? That would be news to me.

    Not at all. A single II/II proof. The business pairing of the proof obverse die was also II/II. Have you determined the reverses to also be the same? (Such was done the prior year for the I/II proof pair.) That business pair is the only one in the catalogue where I couldn't identify a distinct marker for the reverse. The proof I imaged the OF doubled. Yes, I know, especially with proofs, strike doubling is a distinct possibility. I saw it on at least a couple. If you, having studied the 1876 especially, have some points to make in that regard, it would be very welcome and helpful. That is what the review process was meant to do. But it works at this stage too. Even the Type II reverse for the I/II business pair is pretty indistinct. The only thing noted was weakness on the FINE dot on some of them. (The proofs were more understudied pretty generally, especially after 1877.)

  • OGDanOGDan Posts: 3,748 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @alefzero said:

    @OriginalDan said:

    @alefzero said:

    >

    I've studied the 76 II/II coins extensively, and if you look at a bunch of the proof examples, you'll see varying degrees of "doubling" on US of A lettering. My theory is this is an artifact of multiple strikes, not something present on the reverse die. You'll see some of these (same die) with zero "doubling" and others with quite a bit, and it can vary in location.

    Are you suggesting there's more than one II/II die pair? That would be news to me.

    Not at all. A single II/II proof. The business pairing of the proof obverse die was also II/II. Have you determined the reverses to also be the same? (Such was done the prior year for the I/II proof pair.) That business pair is the only one in the catalogue where I couldn't identify a distinct marker for the reverse. The proof I imaged the OF doubled. Yes, I know, especially with proofs, strike doubling is a distinct possibility. I saw it on at least a couple. If you, having studied the 1876 especially, have some points to make in that regard, it would be very welcome and helpful. That is what the review process was meant to do. But it works at this stage too. Even the Type II reverse for the I/II business pair is pretty indistinct. The only thing noted was weakness on the FINE dot on some of them. (The proofs were more understudied pretty generally, especially after 1877.)

    The same reverse die used for the II/II proof was used with the 4 finger obverse proof, 4 finger obverse business strike, and a regular I/II business strike. That reverse “got around”.

    There’s a small die chip on the right side of the ribbon of the E Pluribus banner on that reverse.

  • OGDanOGDan Posts: 3,748 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Just noticed, I think you’re missing this obverse in your list. This is what I call the 4 finger obverse. It’s otherwise type I, but the finger count looks like type II.


  • alefzeroalefzero Posts: 975 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @OriginalDan said:
    Just noticed, I think you’re missing this obverse in your list. This is what I call the 4 finger obverse. It’s otherwise type I, but the finger count looks like type II.

    I was not sure how to classify that one. Some apparently call it 1.5. Does it look hand engraved to you or creatively hubbed? I am thinking the former. I recall one reverse having a chip a chip at the lower part of the right fold of the EPU banner. I will need to revisit those coins to see if that was it. If it was the same die, it will simplify things a bit. They really did reuse dies a lot, especially in Carson City.

  • mbogomanmbogoman Posts: 5,186 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited January 25, 2022 7:50AM

    In addition to a QA review, I am looking for proposals for inclusions in a reasonably sized list, like the VAM Top 100. Trying to steer clear of ultrararities that make such a set achievable by only one or two and with a ton of bucks. Something like the wide small cc for 1875 would be such a coin, while that for 1874 might be a welcome challenge.

    I humbly disagree with this approach. Whether or not a variety is ultrarare should have no bearing on whether or not it is included. "Achievability" is a function of one's wallet no matter what you collect and is subjective. The list should be objective and not based on what may or may not be affordable depending on the size of one's wallet. If the variety verifiably exists, it must be included. The "small wide cc" set (as you referred to) is an excellent and obvious example. Put an asterisk by the ultrarare ones indicating so. Those who collect the set would want to know about the rarities so they can look for them.

  • alefzeroalefzero Posts: 975 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @mbogoman said:
    In addition to a QA review, I am looking for proposals for inclusions in a reasonably sized list, like the VAM Top 100. Trying to steer clear of ultrararities that make such a set achievable by only one or two and with a ton of bucks. Something like the wide small cc for 1875 would be such a coin, while that for 1874 might be a welcome challenge.

    I humbly disagree with this approach. Whether or not a variety is ultrarare should have no bearing on whether or not it is included. "Achievability" is a function of one's wallet no matter what you collect and is subjective. The list should be objective and not based on what may or may not be affordable depending on the size of one's wallet. If the variety verifiably exists, it must be included. The "small wide cc" set (as you referred to) is an excellent and obvious example. Put an asterisk by the ultrarare ones indicating so. Those who collect the set would want to know about the rarities so they can look for them.

    There is a way of accommodating both: include both for that slot in the set. The Ultrararity would obviously be worth more points and $$$, but completion would be less elusive. There are ultrararities among the Morgan list sets: 1889 VAM-23A is an example. Part of the reasoning behind its inclusion was that people then looking for it would ferret out others in the wild. But that backfired when Jeff O did the Hit List. He included the 1921-D VAM-1X. Turned out that the only known specimen to date is the one he owns. It is a great one with huge obverse cuds and attendant flow starvation. It was somewhat changed by splitting it into two possibilities. One was that one, redesignated 1X2. The other the earlier state, without cuds, listed as 1X1.

    In this case, perhaps the challenge could leave many with a vacancy or two for most collectors, and with some hope and dream of picking that wide 1875-cc. I'll start another thread soon enough one this proposed list and maybe we can hack it out as an informed community. There are some far less challenging but interesting, like the 1877-S broken arrows (comes in two states, one tougher, and is difficult above AU), that differentiate such a list from a list of the rarest of the rare. I am more inclined in that direction. That 1875-cc is elusive, to say the least, and also interesting. It would be harder to justify it if it were a Philly release with nothing particularly going on except an unremarkable date position being extremely rare.

  • CryptoCrypto Posts: 3,720 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited January 25, 2022 3:41PM

    @alefzero

    I disagree about excluding coins like the 75cc Wide (although I admit I am not impartial). Couple of points.

    -100 Vams is too many. the big coins get lost in the little ones and a day top 25 list is what makes it completable, not excluding rare or expensive challenges. The 78cc is more expensive than any Trade variety save maybe the 76 2/2 and the 76s DDO but those would make any list even though there is only about 12-15 76s DDOs known which is very rare. Peace dollars and Morgans have had the larger varieties suppressed by the proliferation of VAMs somewhat. a 1901 shiffted eagle which is a major DDR is listed the same as a minor clash on a common 1903o. It becomes overload at a point

    -The Wide CCs are one of the oldest recognized varieties being mentioned in auction listing back to at lest the 1940s, the subset of a 73,74,75 & 76 wide CC that all share the same rev die is one of the seminal accomplishments for specialists of the series and has been done by at least 4 different people on this board. It is possible

    -A varieties list is about a coin being worthy of note, not always easy to get. Remember hard for one person might be easy for another.

    -By adding it to the list you are encouraging others to look for them, each one of the 3 known were found for less than a $1000 buck each by true experts on the series. This group has also picked multiple 76s DDOs (4 and counting), 76 4 finger type 1/2 and countless other cool coins. Inclusion encourages discovery

  • yosclimberyosclimber Posts: 4,798 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited January 25, 2022 4:13PM

    When Dale Miller and I made a Top 100 list for seated half dimes,
    we did some fence sitting on this question.
    We made a "collectible" Top 100, then added another 8 that we called
    "Great but Too Rare for the Top 100".
    Essentially we made 2 lists, one of 100 and another of 108.
    https://forums.collectors.com/discussion/1035720/top-100-seated-half-dime-varieties-list-and-112-page-pdf

    And yeah, estimated rarity can change, especially in response to the list.
    One coin I thought would be on the "Too Rare" list was the 1853 V-8a (big reverse cud).
    For fun I looked for it on ebay, was surprised to find one, bought it, and this upped the count enough to make it collectible,
    so it's on the regular Top 100.

  • alefzeroalefzero Posts: 975 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited January 25, 2022 5:05PM

    @Crypto said:
    @alefzero

    I disagree about excluding coins like the 75cc Wide (although I admit I am not impartial). Couple of points.

    I floored the idea, but if you see my reply, it seems good. I am not going to dictate such a list but collaborate it here soon in a separate post.

    -100 Vams is too many. the big coins get lost in the little ones and top 25 list is what makes it completable not excluding rare or expensive. The 78cc is more expensive than any Trade variety save maybe the 76 2/2 and the 76s DDO but those would make any list even though there is only about 12-15 76s DDOs known which is very rare. Peace dollars and Morgans have had the larger varieties suppressed by the proliferation of VAMs somewhat. a 1901 shiffted eagle which is a major DDR is listed the same as a minor clash on a common 1903o. It becomes overload at a point

    Never suggested it be 100 coins, just that it be a somewhat equivalent to the Morgan Top 100. There are over 5000 Morgan varieties and 100 was a reasonable number for such a list for that series. Turned out, for better or worse, it was followed by a Hot 50, Hit List 40, and other lists for that series. But it also has a huge and variety-motivated collector base.

    I have not done a full count yet, but there are roughly 200 obverse and 200 reverse dies from 1873 through 1878 for the Trade dollars. So it is more on the order of 10% of the size of the Morgan catalogue. But certainly 10 varieties in a list would not motivate many collectors. We can hammer that out soon and separately.

    -The Wide CCs are one of the oldest recognized varieties being being mentioned in auction listing back to at lest the 1940s, the subset of a 73,74,75 & 76 wide CC that all share the same rev die is one of the seminal accomplishments for specialists of the series and has been done by at least 4 different people on this board. It is possible

    -A varieties list is about a coin being worth of note, not always easy to get. Remember hard for one person might be easy for another.

    -By adding it to the list you are encouraging others to look for them, each one of the 3 known were found for less than a $1000 buck each by true experts on the series. This group has also picked multiple 76s DDOs (4 and counting), 76 4 finger type 1/2 and countless other cool coins. Inclusion encourages discovery

    Here is, off the top of my head a rough idea of a starting point for interesting and some rare varieties worth considering. The numbering, of course, is meaningless to others at this point. It is for me to keep my thoughts straight (using a C- prefix as seems to be the convention). The descriptions should be familiar enough.

    1. 1873 C-2.1/2.2/2.3: different stages of the very familiar second proof for the date with the pair of parallel "whip" die polish lines through the 900.
    2. 1873 C-6.1: Worm die polish on Liberty's upper right arm and many strong die scratches from the reverse denticles to the legend.
    3. 1873-CC C-1: Nearly the entire date is visible punched high into the denticles and there is a prominent gouge in the D/DOLLAR.
    4. 1873-CC C-2/4/5: FS-301 with three different reverse dies
    5. 1874-CC C-2.1: Gouged eagle's neck
    6. 1875 C-3/6: Type II Reverse proof die pair (C-6 is the reuse for circulation strikes)
    7. 1875-CC C-15: Wide small cc
    8. 1875-CC C-13: RPM CC/cc
    9. 1875-S C-2.1: Large break on the first L/DOLLAR
    10. 1875-S C-6: RPM S/CC FS-501
    11. 1875-S C-7/7.1: RPM S/CC FS-502 (7.1 has a break on the top of the second S/STATES)
    12. 1875-S C-10.2: Single break on R/DOLLAR and radial break through star 3
    13. 1875-S C-11.2: Double break on R/DOLLAR and patch of die scratches in Liberty's lower garment
    14. 1875-S C-12.1/14.1: Gouge between talon and branch end, two different obverses
    15. 1875-S C-25.1: Long radial break from the denticles to the lower IGWT right banner fold corner
    16. 1875-S C-29.2: Clashed, radial break between stars 2 and 3, chips on Liberty's thighs
    17. 1875-S C-30.1: Long break from the denticles, through star 4, curving up to Liberty's right hand
    18. 1876 C-5: Type II reverse proof with rusted waist
    19. 1876-CC C-1/1.1: FS-801 DDR, 1.1 is with the CC connected by a horizontal scratch
    20. 1876-CC C-2: Wide small cc
    21. 1876-CC C-3.2: Pitted stars 12 and 13, wide large CC, pin gouge in N/GRAINS
    22. 1876-CC C-5.2: Gouges through INS/GRAINS, break on second T/STATES
    23. 1876-S C-12.1: Strong radial break left of star 4, crossing star joining crack, broken left side of right serif of U/UNITED
    24. 1876-S C-20.1: Clashed (DOL?) and strong gouge at the back of Liberty's neck
    25. 1876-S C-31: Type I/II with large S
    26. 1876-S C-32.1: Strong radial break from denticles to the right of F/OF and into the EPU motto banner
    27. 1876-S C-33/35: RPD 76 FS-301, different reverses
    28. 1876-S C-34.1: RPD 76 (not same as FS-301), radial break from rim between OL/DOLLAR
    29. 1876-S C-36.1: FS-101 DDO
    30. 1876-S C-38: Type II/II with large S
    31. 1877 C-5: DDR, prominent on the EPU motto
    32. 1877 C-10.1: Pitted obverse
    33. 1877 C-12/12.1: DDO left stars and wheat, 12.1 has a break between RA/TRADE
    34. 1877 C-13/14/15: DDO right stars and wheat FS-101 different reverses
    35. 1877 C-25.1: Large chip on Liberty's left wrist, gouge atop NS/GRAINS
    36. 1877-CC C-2.1: Heavily clashed and broken dies
    37. 1877-CC C-3.1: Heavily clashed
    38. 1877-S C-2/15.1/19.1/20: No dots, bullnose R/DOLLAR, different dies completely, 20 has crescent after AMERICA
    39. 1877-S C-3/3.1: Broken arrows, 3.1 has the lower shaft re-engraved
    40. 1877-S C-4: Duck lips feathers - SF Mint touched up reverse die (cited as a different hub elsewhere)
    41. 1877-S C-16/16.1/17/18.1: DDR FS-802, three different obverses, 16 is before the arrow shaft break
    42. 1877-S C-21: RPD 7. RPM S FS-301
    43. 1877-S C-22.1/22.2: Strong radial break through E/AMERICA, 22.2 has additional break to D/DOLLAR
    44. 1877-S C-26/50.1/50.2: Large break on right IGWT banner end, 50.1/50.2 (progressive break on arrow shaft) was earlier than 26
    45. 1877-S C-27.1: Radial break along left side of second S/STATES
    46. 1877-S C-31.1: Long radial break after AMERICA
    47. 1877-S C-32.1: Long, heavy radial break from rim, between AD/TRADE to A/GRAINS
    48. 1877-S C-37: Worm die polish in Liberty's lower garment
    49. 1877-S C-38.1: Radial breaks to lower wheat, right side of F/OF to banner, and through R/DOLLAR
    50. 1877-S C-46: DDR FS-801
    51. 1877-S C-47.1: Radial break through the first S/STATES to the banner
    52. 1877-S C-48.1: Clashed dies, dot on first 7
    53. 1877-S C-54.1: Radial break through R/TRADE
    54. 1878-S C-13: Heavy lower garment polish, DDR
    55. 1878-S C-16.1: Pinned Liberty with thin horizontal gouges in garment thighs and through left wrist
    56. 1878-S C-18/18.1/18.2/18.3: DDR FS-801, 18.1 is heavily clashed, 18.2 is remediated with large wing edge chip

    So it is easy to arrive at an interesting and challenging 50-coin set with such considerations. There are also plenty of not dots after FINE, maybe chopmarked 1875 and 1878-CC, plenty of poor man's DDRs, lots of other clashes and breaks, and some that have eluded me. Could put the wide small cc ones in a single slot too (crazy points for 1875-cc). Anyway, something to think about and we can dedicate a thread to hashing it out. Seems 50 might be a fun number, perhaps calling it the Challenge 50.

  • CryptoCrypto Posts: 3,720 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited January 26, 2022 1:15PM

    When I did a variety set I included all the hub types as the back bone of the set and

    73 CC MPD FS 301 & 302
    73 wide CC 1.0 & 1.2 mm
    74 cc wide CC 1.0 & 1.2mm
    75s/cc FS 501 & 502
    75s micro S (it’s a RPD too)
    75cc wide CC 1.2mm
    76 1.5/2 proof and business strike
    76p type 1/1 Perfect rev no broken letters
    76s DDO
    76s RPD
    76s 1/2 large S & micro s
    76s 2/2 large S & micro s
    76 cc DDR
    76 cc type 1/1 non DDR
    76 cc Wide CC 1.2mm
    77p DDO
    77s broken arrows
    77s RPD
    77s DDR 801 & 802
    77s micro S
    78s DDR FS801
    78 proof

    Coins I looked for but never added
    76s Type 1/1 date in denticals
    76 1/1 proof

    When coupled to the rarer hub type namely the 75p 1/1 and the 76 2/2 it was a massively challenging set. Die lines don’t fire up collectors outside of true students so I aimed for naked eye vanities and rare or unusual MM combos

  • CryptoCrypto Posts: 3,720 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @alefzero

    And @OriginalDan is correct the die chip in eplurb banner rev is used on all 76p 2/2, 76p 1.5/2 coins proof and uncirculated and one 76p 1/2 business strike coin

  • jesbrokenjesbroken Posts: 10,011 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Are there any 76 1/2 proof coins?
    Jim


    When a man who is honestly mistaken hears the truth, he will either quit being mistaken or cease to be honest....Abraham Lincoln

    Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.....Mark Twain
  • kazkaz Posts: 9,179 ✭✭✭✭✭

    I have to say, this thread has been an impressive presentation of numismatic scholarship-in-progress.

  • alefzeroalefzero Posts: 975 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited January 25, 2022 6:07PM

    @Crypto - Yes, that's where we need to go. Consider a number of approaches to arrive at one that has a reasonable chance of market acceptance, can be collected from VF on up, and other considerations. There is also no reason other specialist lists are impossible. I was hesitant to even include proofs because that knocks some collectors right out. Maybe a Challenge list for the more budget-minded collectors and an Elite set for the whales. Of course, all the CPG need to be included, except perhaps the 1878-S FS-802. Has anyone even seen one? I have not. Seen a few minor DDRs though.

  • alefzeroalefzero Posts: 975 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @kaz said:
    I have to say, this thread has been an impressive presentation of numismatic scholarship-in-progress.

    But based on the thread title, nobody would ever find it. LOL

  • alefzeroalefzero Posts: 975 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @jesbroken said:
    Are there any 76 1/2 proof coins?
    Jim

    Yes, most of the proofs I have seen are Type I obverse and Type II reverse. Identified 4 die pairs and two of those reverses were reused.

  • OGDanOGDan Posts: 3,748 ✭✭✭✭✭

    As a TD variety specialist, if I was just starting out and I saw a list of 50 or 100 TDs I’d turn around and go collect something else. They are too expensive for one, to do that many, and to make a list that long you’re including a lot of minor varieties that like Crypto said don’t get collectors excited. It’s only a 7 year set with not a ton of major mistakes by the mint.

    I would keep it manageable, in the 25-30 coin range, and include the more major, seeing eye varieties no matter how rare.

  • CryptoCrypto Posts: 3,720 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @alefzero said:
    @Crypto - Yes, that's where we need to go. Consider a number of approaches to arrive at one that has a reasonable chance of market acceptance, can be collected from VF on up, and other considerations. There is also no reason other specialist lists are impossible. I was hesitant to even include proofs because that knocks some collectors right out. Maybe a Challenge list for the more budget-minded collectors and an Elite set for the whales. Of course, all the CPG need to be included, except perhaps the 1878-S FS-802. Has anyone even seen one? I have not. Seen a few minor DDRs though.

    I forgot a big one,
    The 76p type 1/1 perfect reverse (without broken letters)

  • alefzeroalefzero Posts: 975 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @Crypto said:

    @alefzero said:
    @Crypto - Yes, that's where we need to go. Consider a number of approaches to arrive at one that has a reasonable chance of market acceptance, can be collected from VF on up, and other considerations. There is also no reason other specialist lists are impossible. I was hesitant to even include proofs because that knocks some collectors right out. Maybe a Challenge list for the more budget-minded collectors and an Elite set for the whales. Of course, all the CPG need to be included, except perhaps the 1878-S FS-802. Has anyone even seen one? I have not. Seen a few minor DDRs though.

    I forgot a big one,
    The 76p type 1/1 perfect reverse (without broken letters)

    Not a proof, I presume, as I have seen no such beast. So it would be a huge rarity. Here is the only such business strike I have found. Have noted only a few of them.

  • kazkaz Posts: 9,179 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @alefzero said:

    @kaz said:
    I have to say, this thread has been an impressive presentation of numismatic scholarship-in-progress.

    But based on the thread title, nobody would ever find it. LOL

    We just need jesbroken to edit the title! Maybe... "Trade Dollar heavyweights present plans for definitive guidebooks"
    or something else that will draw thousands of views...

  • alefzeroalefzero Posts: 975 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited January 25, 2022 8:01PM

    @OriginalDan said:
    As a TD variety specialist, if I was just starting out and I saw a list of 50 or 100 TDs I’d turn around and go collect something else. They are too expensive for one, to do that many, and to make a list that long you’re including a lot of minor varieties that like Crypto said don’t get collectors excited. It’s only a 7 year set with not a ton of major mistakes by the mint.

    I would keep it manageable, in the 25-30 coin range, and include the more major, seeing eye varieties no matter how rare.

    I think you are right. As collectors get more advanced they will gravitate to more. I also think a couple different lists makes more sense. The guys already doing varieties to some extent would want a more spanning and difficult list. But how about this reduction from the 56 I posed for a one geared to new collectors? Again the idea is that many more would be buying coins in the hundreds of dollars each, not thousands, and mostly the more common dates. Here are 33 and could add a slot for the small wide cc which would be good for 1873 through 1876 and another (77-s small s, ...). That would be a manageable 35 and the more expensive ones are pretty much some of the CPG ones (cannot leave them out) and a few Carson City issues.

    1873-CC C-1: Nearly the entire date is visible punched high into the denticles and there is a prominent gouge in the D/DOLLAR. [an MPD that needs to be in the list]
    1873-CC C-2/4/5: FS-301 with three different reverse dies [CPG]
    1875-S C-2.1: Large break on the first L/DOLLAR [a good one for pickers to spot and long known]
    1875-S C-6: RPM S/CC FS-501 [CPG]
    1875-S C-7/7.1: RPM S/CC FS-502 (7.1 has a break on the top of the second S/STATES) [CPG]
    1875-S C-10.2/11.2: (10.2) Single break on R/DOLLAR and radial break through star 3, (11.2) Double break on R/DOLLAR and patch of die scratches in Liberty's lower garment [another for fun picking and not expensive]
    1875-S C-12.1/14.1: Gouge between talon and branch end, two different obverses [another pick-worthy reverse]
    1875-S C-25.1: Long radial break from the denticles to the lower IGWT right banner fold corner [too bold to deny]
    1876-CC C-1/1.1: FS-801 DDR, 1.1 is with the CC connected by a horizontal scratch [CPG]
    1876-CC C-3.2: Pitted stars 12 and 13, wide large CC, pin gouge in N/GRAINS [pick-worthy things going on]
    1876-CC C-5.2: Gouges through INS/GRAINS, break on second T/STATES [more nice eye visible stuff]
    1876-S C-12.1: Strong radial break left of star 4, crossing star joining crack, broken left side of right serif of U/UNITED [common enough, cheap, and very easy to see]
    1876-S C-31: Type I/II with large S [elusive and stands out from the herd]
    1876-S C-32.1: Strong radial break from denticles to the right of F/OF and into the EPU motto banner [nice, visible break]
    1876-S C-33/35: RPD 76 FS-301, different reverses [CPG]
    1876-S C-34.1: RPD 76 (not same as FS-301), radial break from rim between OL/DOLLAR [interesting one]
    1876-S C-36.1: FS-101 DDO [CPG]
    1876-S C-38: Type II/II with large S [rare and stands out from the other II/II ones] -- combine with C-31 above?
    1877 C-10.1: Pitted obverse [pickable good and cheap intro one, but could be replaced]
    1877 C-12/12.1: DDO left stars and wheat, 12.1 has a break between RA/TRADE [long known and worthwhile]
    1877 C-13/14/15: DDO right stars and wheat FS-101 different reverses [CPG]
    1877-S C-2/15.1/19.1/20: No dots, bullnose R/DOLLAR, different dies completely, 20 has crescent after AMERICA [fun to pick and the cheapest date, found at every price point and several different varieties]
    1877-S C-3/3.1: Broken arrows, 3.1 has the lower shaft re-engraved [classic]
    1877-S C-4: Duck lips feathers - SF Mint touched up reverse die (cited as a different hub elsewhere) [unique reverse]
    1877-S C-16/16.1/17/18.1: DDR FS-802, three different obverses, 16 is before the arrow shaft break [CPG]
    1877-S C-21: RPD 7, RPM S FS-301 [CPG]
    1877-S C-22.1/22.2: Strong radial break through E/AMERICA, 22.2 has additional break to D/DOLLAR [very cool]
    1877-S C-26/50.1/50.2: Large break on right IGWT banner end, 50.1/50.2 (progressive break on arrow shaft) was earlier than 26 [largest break]
    1877-S C-32.1: Long, heavy radial break from rim, between AD/TRADE to A/GRAINS [stands out, but I have one and have seen no others so far, might be too difficult, but it is a cheap date]
    1877-S C-38.1: Radial breaks to lower wheat, right side of F/OF to banner, and through R/DOLLAR [lots going on]
    1877-S C-46: DDR FS-801 [CPG]
    1877-S C-47.1: Radial break through the first S/STATES to the banner [really cool break and difficult to find]
    1878-S C-16.1: Pinned Liberty with thin horizontal gouges in garment thighs and through left wrist [neat, but another that could be replaced]
    1878-S C-18/18.1/18.2/18.3: DDR FS-801, 18.1 is heavily clashed, 18.2 is remediated with large wing edge chip [CPG]

  • jesbrokenjesbroken Posts: 10,011 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @kaz said:

    @alefzero said:

    @kaz said:
    I have to say, this thread has been an impressive presentation of numismatic scholarship-in-progress.

    But based on the thread title, nobody would ever find it. LOL

    We just need jesbroken to edit the title! Maybe... "Trade Dollar heavyweights present plans for definitive guidebooks"
    or something else that will draw thousands of views...

    Hope this helps.
    Jim


    When a man who is honestly mistaken hears the truth, he will either quit being mistaken or cease to be honest....Abraham Lincoln

    Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.....Mark Twain
  • davewesendavewesen Posts: 6,204 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @OriginalDan said:
    As a TD variety specialist, if I was just starting out and I saw a list of 50 or 100 TDs I’d turn around and go collect something else. They are too expensive for one, to do that many, and to make a list that long you’re including a lot of minor varieties that like Crypto said don’t get collectors excited. It’s only a 7 year set with not a ton of major mistakes by the mint.

    I would keep it manageable, in the 25-30 coin range, and include the more major, seeing eye varieties no matter how rare.

    when you publish, make varieties with special codes so PCGS and NGC can then charge for designating them and have a registry set for them. Is 1878 proof really a variety?

    ... or have 15-20 major varieties and 60-80 complete

  • CryptoCrypto Posts: 3,720 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited January 26, 2022 5:05AM

    @davewesen said:

    @OriginalDan said:
    As a TD variety specialist, if I was just starting out and I saw a list of 50 or 100 TDs I’d turn around and go collect something else. They are too expensive for one, to do that many, and to make a list that long you’re including a lot of minor varieties that like Crypto said don’t get collectors excited. It’s only a 7 year set with not a ton of major mistakes by the mint.

    I would keep it manageable, in the 25-30 coin range, and include the more major, seeing eye varieties no matter how rare.

    when you publish, make varieties with special codes so PCGS and NGC can then charge for designating them and have a registry set for them. Is 1878 proof really a variety?

    ... or have 15-20 major varieties and 60-80 complete

    No the 78 proof isn’t a variety but it was a glaring hole in an otherwise large set due to there being no BS strikes that year so it was needed to have all the dates and MMs from 73-78. I also wanted at least one of the proof only years. That was my set, others are free to define it as they chose fit.

    Also the varieties have NGC numbers already including all the hub types, Doubled dies, RPDs and the rest of the FS numbers and many of the unique mint marks

  • jesbrokenjesbroken Posts: 10,011 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Ok folks, when can we expect the first release of the pdf version of Trade Dollar Book and how much? C'mon let's get serious about this, I am a serious buyer. :p
    Jim


    When a man who is honestly mistaken hears the truth, he will either quit being mistaken or cease to be honest....Abraham Lincoln

    Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.....Mark Twain
  • MsMorrisineMsMorrisine Posts: 33,218 ✭✭✭✭✭

    I see pdf versions cannibalizing sales from the print.

    Print Pre-sales?

    Current maintainer of Stone's Master List of Favorite Websites // My BST transactions
  • CryptoCrypto Posts: 3,720 ✭✭✭✭✭

    What should happen is @mbogoman should publish his amazing set in the LSCC journal with pictures and pick up points as a variety guide. I bet they would provide the templates and Dan and I could help with pictures of alts or gaps and group edit. It would make a hell of an issue and set a standard

  • davewesendavewesen Posts: 6,204 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @jesbroken said:
    Ok folks, when can we expect the first release of the pdf version of Trade Dollar Book and how much? C'mon let's get serious about this, I am a serious buyer. :p
    Jim

    maybe you can talk them into a pre-publication pdf in order to proof, correct errors and give suggestions
    (typos, syntax, formatting, logic ... )
    someone that actually knows about the subject can do a better job than a publisher editor in many things

  • CryptoCrypto Posts: 3,720 ✭✭✭✭✭

    In terms of rarity I rate them

    75cc wide
    76s DDO
    77s ddr 801
    75p type 1/1
    76p perfect rev
    73cc wide 1.2
    74cc wide 1.0
    73cc wide 1.0 MPD Obv
    76 2/2
    74cc wide
    76 2/2 large S

    Everything else can be found in about a year. It would take a decade and luck for most of those

  • OGDanOGDan Posts: 3,748 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @Crypto said:
    In terms of rarity I rate them

    75cc wide
    76s DDO
    77s ddr 801
    75p type 1/1
    76p perfect rev
    73cc wide 1.2
    74cc wide 1.0
    73cc wide 1.0 MPD Obv
    76 2/2
    74cc wide
    76 2/2 large S

    Everything else can be found in about a year. It would take a decade and luck for most of those

    You should clarify the 74-cc wide 1.2 entry. Generally I agree with your ordering, and I would add one more - the 76 type 1.5 "4 finger" (business strike)...somewhere towards the end of this list. I think it's about the same rarity as the 76 2/2.

  • alefzeroalefzero Posts: 975 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @OriginalDan said:

    @Crypto said:
    In terms of rarity I rate them

    75cc wide
    76s DDO
    77s ddr 801
    75p type 1/1
    76p perfect rev
    73cc wide 1.2
    74cc wide 1.0
    73cc wide 1.0 MPD Obv
    76 2/2
    74cc wide
    76 2/2 large S

    Everything else can be found in about a year. It would take a decade and luck for most of those

    You should clarify the 74-cc wide 1.2 entry. Generally I agree with your ordering, and I would add one more - the 76 type 1.5 "4 finger" (business strike)...somewhere towards the end of this list. I think it's about the same rarity as the 76 2/2.

    I have not seen such a beast as a business strike 1876 with a four-finger Type I (so-called Type1.5) obverse. If anyone has a link to one in an auction archive or would share images, it would be much appreciated. If it does exist, it must be a big rarity. I would like to see if it was the same die pair as the proof or even the same obverse die.

  • DDRDDR Posts: 1,587 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @alefzero here you go... This one has a chop mark so pretty sure it is a business strike that circulated.

  • mbogomanmbogoman Posts: 5,186 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @alefzero said:

    @OriginalDan said:

    @Crypto said:
    In terms of rarity I rate them

    75cc wide
    76s DDO
    77s ddr 801
    75p type 1/1
    76p perfect rev
    73cc wide 1.2
    74cc wide 1.0
    73cc wide 1.0 MPD Obv
    76 2/2
    74cc wide
    76 2/2 large S

    Everything else can be found in about a year. It would take a decade and luck for most of those

    You should clarify the 74-cc wide 1.2 entry. Generally I agree with your ordering, and I would add one more - the 76 type 1.5 "4 finger" (business strike)...somewhere towards the end of this list. I think it's about the same rarity as the 76 2/2.

    I have not seen such a beast as a business strike 1876 with a four-finger Type I (so-called Type1.5) obverse. If anyone has a link to one in an auction archive or would share images, it would be much appreciated. If it does exist, it must be a big rarity. I would like to see if it was the same die pair as the proof or even the same obverse die.

    Here's the one from my collection, PCGS AU58:

  • alefzeroalefzero Posts: 975 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited February 14, 2022 7:42AM

    Thanks, @mbogoman and @DDR! That is the exact same die pair.

    It raises an interesting secondary inquiry. Is there a different collar between the proof and circulation strike? We see the same issue for the 1875 Type II reverse proof. In that case, the proofs are rare but the business strikes not so much, in a relative sense. I had speculated that what are called proofs in that case might simply be specimen strikes in the initial use of the new hub product. Discriminating the collars would possibly reinforce that. Here might be the same, but the Mint might have decided to stop and produce the Type II obverse hub, rather than use the speculated engraved finger die, right away. This is the sort of thing Roger is excellent at in running down potential Mint documentation. It does hint at some pathology then and there.

  • CryptoCrypto Posts: 3,720 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @alefzero said:
    Thanks, @mbogoman and @DDR! That is the exact same die pair.

    It raises an interesting secondary inquiry. Is there a different collar between the proof and circulation strike? We see the same issue for the 1875 Type II reverse proof. In that case, the proofs are rare but the business strikes not so much, in a relative sense. I had speculated that what are called proofs in that case might simply be specimen strikes in the initial use of the new hub product. Discriminating the collars would possibly reinforce that. Here might be the same, but the Mint might have decided to stop and produce the Type II obverse hub, rather than use the speculated engraved finger die, right away. This is the sort of thing Roger is excellent at in running down potential Mint documentation. It does hint at some pathology then and there.

    Yes there is a different collar with different Reed counts for the 76 4 finger proving different emissions. @OriginalDan and I got super nerdy into them a few years ago and we might still have the counts laying around

  • CryptoCrypto Posts: 3,720 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @mbogoman said:

    @alefzero said:

    @OriginalDan said:

    @Crypto said:
    In terms of rarity I rate them

    75cc wide
    76s DDO
    77s ddr 801
    75p type 1/1
    76p perfect rev
    73cc wide 1.2
    74cc wide 1.0
    73cc wide 1.0 MPD Obv
    76 2/2
    74cc wide
    76 2/2 large S

    Everything else can be found in about a year. It would take a decade and luck for most of those

    You should clarify the 74-cc wide 1.2 entry. Generally I agree with your ordering, and I would add one more - the 76 type 1.5 "4 finger" (business strike)...somewhere towards the end of this list. I think it's about the same rarity as the 76 2/2.

    I have not seen such a beast as a business strike 1876 with a four-finger Type I (so-called Type1.5) obverse. If anyone has a link to one in an auction archive or would share images, it would be much appreciated. If it does exist, it must be a big rarity. I would like to see if it was the same die pair as the proof or even the same obverse die.

    Here's the one from my collection, PCGS AU58:

    I am not soooo sure that isn’t a proof.

  • BustDMsBustDMs Posts: 1,618 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Put me down for a printed copy.

    Q: When does a collector become a numismatist?



    A: The year they spend more on their library than their coin collection.



    A numismatist is judged more on the content of their library than the content of their cabinet.
  • alefzeroalefzero Posts: 975 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited February 14, 2022 9:28PM

    Amazing to see all of them in one group. VERY COOL.

    Here are the counts I have in the enumeration of dies and varieties thus far, through 1878. Counts before the parentheses are of varieties, which is subjective.

    1873: 11 (2 proof die pairs, 4 business die pairs)
    1873-CC: 7 (7 die pairs)
    1873-S: 7 (7 die pairs)
    1874: 12 (2 proof die pairs, 9 business die pairs)
    1874-CC: 22 (21 die pairs)
    1874-S: 14 (14 die pairs)
    1875: 6 (2 I/I proof die pairs, 1 I/II proof die pair, 1 I/I business die pair, 2 I/II business die pairs - 1 same as proof pair)
    1875-CC: 15 (12 I/I die pairs, 3 I/II die pairs)
    1875-S: 39 (22 I/I die pairs, 9 I/II die pairs)
    1876: 16 (1 I/I proof die pair, 5 I/II proof die pairs, 1 II/II proof die pair, 2 I/I business die pairs, 6 I/II business die pairs - 1 same as proof pair, 1 II/II business die pair - same as proof pair)
    1876-CC: 14 (3 I/I die pairs, 7 I/II die pairs)
    1876-S: 49 (22 I/I die pairs, 8 I/II die pairs, 10 II/II die pairs)
    1877: 29 (3 proof die pairs, 23 business die pairs)
    1877-CC: 14 (10 die pairs)
    1877-S: 69 (59 die pairs)
    1878: 3 (3 die pairs)
    1878-CC: 4 (4 die pairs)
    1878-S: 20 (18 die pairs)

    That is 351 varieties, 307 die pairs (20 proof and 284 business, 3 were reused proof pairs for business strikes), if I counted right. 198 obverse dies and 205 reverse dies (48 null, 46 CC, 111 S) used. The CC and S reverses prepared, per Bowers, is in the ballpark, being 48 and 119 respectively. The missing 2 CC might be accounted for as the two reverses sent later to San Francisco as the S/CC ones. There were some unknowns and plus numbers given, but some may have been returned unused, destroyed, or entire die productions may have been lost to Asian melts/overstrikes post-delivery. I could do the counts on discrete dated obverse dies for each mint, but this is enough for now. I need to think about getting ready for Long Beach.

  • kevinjkevinj Posts: 980 ✭✭✭

    Alefzero,

    Checked out your web site listing of Trade Dollars, very detailed, great photos, very cool

    On publishing, I can show you how and connect to my printers, which will professionally print any number of copies
    for a relatively inexpensive amount. I have written 58 books to date, mostly have only printed 100-200 copies of the
    last few books. Completing the Restrike book, roughly 450 pages, will only print 100. Distribute mostly myself and
    also through a few of the main book wholesalers.

    Over the years, always work on many books in the background, when I have enough for a single book, focus on that.
    Then I dive into history, hot topics, archive research and such. Of course the big hot topic on the Trades is the 84 and 85 proofs.

    Documenting Trade dollar die varieties (doubled dies, mpds, rpds) for years
    Photographed
    1876 DDO (1)
    1876-S DDO (1)
    1876-CC DDR (1)
    1877 DDO (2) DDR (2)
    1877-S DDR (2)
    1878-S DDR (4)
    1875-S/CC (1), the second listed in CP is to small to be the remnant of a C mintmark
    1873-CC MPD (2)
    1876-S MPD (1)
    1875 RPD (1)
    1876-S RPD (1)
    1877 RPD (1)

    I have these in a PDF, if you write me at kevinjflynn88@yahoo.com, I can send you a copy

    Thanks
    Kevin

    @alefzero said:
    Amazing to see all of them in one group. VERY COOL.

    Kevin J Flynn
  • jesbrokenjesbroken Posts: 10,011 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited February 13, 2023 12:59PM

    Where is alefzero's website? Where are you at with the new Trade Dollar Book?
    Jim


    When a man who is honestly mistaken hears the truth, he will either quit being mistaken or cease to be honest....Abraham Lincoln

    Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.....Mark Twain
  • kevinjkevinj Posts: 980 ✭✭✭

    @OriginalDan said:

    @alefzero said:

    >

    I've studied the 76 II/II coins extensively, and if you look at a bunch of the proof examples, you'll see varying degrees of "doubling" on US of A lettering. My theory is this is an artifact of multiple strikes, not something present on the reverse die. You'll see some of these (same die) with zero "doubling" and others with quite a bit, and it can vary in location.

    Are you suggesting there's more than one II/II die pair? That would be news to me.

    The doubling on OF on this coin is strike doubling, it is not die doubling

    Kevin J Flynn
  • kevinjkevinj Posts: 980 ✭✭✭

    @jesbroken said:
    Where is alefzero's website? Where are you at with the new Trade Dollar Book?
    Jim

    For John's web site
    http://registry.ssdcvams.com/Trade/

    For my book
    I am pretty far along with the die variety section (doubled dies, MPDs, RPD, OMM, RPM)
    Should have most of the archive records I need
    Have to write the history, hub changes, hot topics, 84&85 proofs, refuted 1875-O/CC #2

    Kevin

    Kevin J Flynn
  • jesbrokenjesbroken Posts: 10,011 ✭✭✭✭✭

    I'll be looking forward to it. Thank you Kevin for your work, it benefits us all.
    Jim


    When a man who is honestly mistaken hears the truth, he will either quit being mistaken or cease to be honest....Abraham Lincoln

    Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.....Mark Twain
  • OGDanOGDan Posts: 3,748 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @kevinj said:

    @OriginalDan said:

    @alefzero said:

    >

    I've studied the 76 II/II coins extensively, and if you look at a bunch of the proof examples, you'll see varying degrees of "doubling" on US of A lettering. My theory is this is an artifact of multiple strikes, not something present on the reverse die. You'll see some of these (same die) with zero "doubling" and others with quite a bit, and it can vary in location.

    Are you suggesting there's more than one II/II die pair? That would be news to me.

    The doubling on OF on this coin is strike doubling, it is not die doubling

    Yep. Note the quotes I used and the description of how it can vary coin to coin. Pretty clear what it is.

  • lermishlermish Posts: 3,012 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Congrats John! I will try to have a friend pick me up a copy at LB and I look forward to picking up the heavy duty version in Pittsburgh myself!

  • slider23slider23 Posts: 655 ✭✭✭✭

    What is the price of the book?

  • alefzeroalefzero Posts: 975 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @slider23 said:
    What is the price of the book?

    I am trying to keep it close to my cost, as this was to popularize things rather than make bread. I am looking at $50 for non--tax situation, $55 for taxed ones (I just do the adjustment to work it out for the tax guys), $5 if I need to ship, and $60 if I sell on eBay.

    I am considering printing the big listing book as black and white to keep costs down. This was done in color. Depends on the quotes and what won't be painful to purchase. This one was 170 pages and the bigger one is around 800 pages last I looked.

  • slider23slider23 Posts: 655 ✭✭✭✭

    If you PM me with your address, I will send you a check for $60 that should cover book plus shipping, and put me on your list for the 800 page big book.

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