Modern Counterfeit Morgan Composition
This counterfeit Morgan came with a consignment I received. There's no disagreement from the consignor regarding the coin being counterfeit, but there is a question about the composition of the piece. He bought it as silver, but my thought it that with the low cost you can acquire similar (if not identical) counterfeits, I'd assume it's a base metal, and plated at best. The only comparison I have on hand is another modern counterfeit Morgan which is holed, and the inside of the hole is yellowish, so I assume it's brass. Both pieces ring.
The piece is slightly underweight, at 26.1g. If there's any chance this could be silver we can go to more effort to figure that out, but if it's definitely just a base metal piece, there's no need to do any additional work.


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I read somewhere a long time ago that some counterfeiters would add a small amount of very fine sand to their metal mix to improve the "ring" of their fake coins. Also, the old-time cash registers had a marble ledge over the cash drawer so the merchant could drop a suspicious coin on the marble ledge and listen to the tone of the ring.
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It does not have the appearance of silver to me. And the likelihood of a modern counterfeit being silver, especially an unconvincing one like this, is unlikely, in my opinion.
the issue is that xrf only goes so deep. you could see if you can find someone to do it for free, but it's going to come back Ag/Cu if real and if it is plated bras mostly Ag/Cu
the best way would be a specific gravity test
A specific gravity test would be conclusive. Google how to do one (easy peasy).
bob
Jeremy this fake weighs 26.7


A PNG member friend gave it to me for my education.
It's not as brassy looking in hand and it gives off a nice thud when dropped on the counter
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i forgot - you can't sell counterfeits on ebay even if marked copy
if you go the way of xrf - take your holed, plated one and compare the two results
Interesting little tidbit. I'd never use the ring test as conclusive that something is good (after all, the one I know is plated rings), but it's a good start and finish when the coin doesn't ring and you don't have to think about it any further.
The color is pretty close to a satin finish modern silver coin (like a Silver Eagle), but certainly the surfaces are very, very odd compared to a real coin. Not to say the coin is silver based on color, but I think the odd surfaces make the coin just look off, and whatever metal it is, I don't think it will ever look normal.
Yup--the piece was sent as just silver, but even if I knew for sure it was silver, it would have still been pulled because it can't be sold there. Now it's just a question of what the piece is and thus what we can do with it.
This handy Youtube video demonstrates the measurement of specific gravity of real and counterfeit coins:
https://youtube.com/watch?v=xw-2kqjtEdI
The "best way" would be to test cut the edge with an XRF. For a bullion coin, scratching/cutting it is not going to impact the value.
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I think zinc over lead could match the specific gravity of 90% silver.
All comments reflect the opinion of the author, even when irrefutably accurate.
Good point. Would a zinc-coated lead slug 'ring?'
More of a "clunk" than a "ring". I'm thinking Pizza Hut red cups instead of Riedel stemware.
Keeper of the VAM Catalog • Professional Coin Imaging • Prime Number Set • World Coins in Early America • British Trade Dollars • Variety Attribution
A zinc plated lead coin could NOT POSSIBLY match the SG of an 80% silver/20% copper Morgan dollar.
It would have to be a composition alloy of about 80% lead and 20% zinc with a zinc plating.
A solid lead core with a zinc plating would have a specific gravity far too high, very close to 11.3, which greatly exceeds the 10.18 midpoint (10.16-10.20) of an actual minted silver Morgan.
Moreover, lead and zinc are very difficult to combine in an alloy due to limited mutual solubility.
If the potential numismatic value of a counterfeit is several multiples of the melt value of the genuine coin, why not use good metal to make the counterfeit more credible?
Do a specific gravity test.
Now that would make sense to me, but it seems not to be the practice of the Chinese mass producers.
This is true. Except for the part that it could "not possibly". You just need a thick zinc layer.
For bonus points, it is actually possible to match the specific gravity of 90/10 silver dollars with 100% lead!
However, my point is only that specific gravity is more definitive as a negative test than a positive one. They are not unique.
An 80% silver Morgan would be counterfeit. 😀
All comments reflect the opinion of the author, even when irrefutably accurate.
This.
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Actually, Aliexpress sells 90% silver varieties as well as base metal varieties.
All comments reflect the opinion of the author, even when irrefutably accurate.
The best way would be a fire assay. Destructive, yes, but it's fake, so who cares?
Keeper of the VAM Catalog • Professional Coin Imaging • Prime Number Set • World Coins in Early America • British Trade Dollars • Variety Attribution
It's definitely platinum
Collector, occasional seller
Access to an XRF is more common. If he can do a fire assay, sure.
All comments reflect the opinion of the author, even when irrefutably accurate.
Just cut it in half with tin snips and depending on how much progress you make, we should be able to determine (with about 60-70% visual accuracy). I like where @messydesk head is at here. If that doesn’t work, to the crucible she goes!
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Magnet first. Then ping test. Get one if you don't already have it, it's a very helpful tool.
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