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What is your current pet peeve?
Mine is the use of the word "original" which I believe should mean a coin which has never been cleaned and shows no trace of ever having been cleaned. Just because a coin has been slabbed does not automatically entitle the coin to be designated as original. Just because a coin has great eye appeal does not automatically entitle the coin to be called original. Any coin that is hairlined cannot be called original with rare exception.
Right now collectors are drawn to coins that are advertised as original and sellers are abusing that word big time.
It is frustrating to purchase a coin advertised as original and receive one that obviously is not. It is now mandatory to call or write the seller and ask what he/she means by original.
Right now collectors are drawn to coins that are advertised as original and sellers are abusing that word big time.
It is frustrating to purchase a coin advertised as original and receive one that obviously is not. It is now mandatory to call or write the seller and ask what he/she means by original.
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Comments
Gandyjai
Web: www.tonyharmer.org
through the threads of the last three weeks, but my pet peeve on
the forum is misspelled words in titles. They are almost impossible
to find later unless you remember.
They don't disturb me in the body so long as I can figure out what
word was meant.
NEWPS - I hate the term. I can't even get past the term to look at the offering.
Estate - Seems it takes forever for some sellers to "liquidate" an estate.
PQ - What hype..what dealer DOESN'T tell you it's PQ for the grade...sheesh
Original - As in "Original Roll" of Morgan silver dollars, and they're all in a plastic tube. Am I supposed to believe that these were taken out of a roll and someone didn't just put together a solid date roll? BTW...I'm not aware that they ever "rolled" Morgans.
These are just a few...
Cheers,
Bob
<< <i>What is your current pet peave? >>
misspelling "peave"!!!
K S
42/92
WNC Coins, LLC
1987-C Hendersonville Road
Asheville, NC 28803
wnccoins.com
(edited to correct all of my misspelling, punctuation and run-on sentances)
............and you obviously haven't looked at as many original proof sets as i have!!
one thing that bugs me is the use of the term Mint State which describes a coin as it left the mint. a wonderfully toned coin may be beautiful with pristine surfaces, but it surely isn't mint state.
al h.
FrederickCoinClub
<< <i>Collectors who try to sell their coins at full retail or more. >>
Are you saying that only DEALERS should be allowed to do this?
Cheers,
Bob
<< <i>Collectors who try to sell their coins at full retail or more >>
this does make sense. If a collector consigns to a auction aren't they trying to get full retail? If they sell on Ebay they are at least trying to get retail. Should collectors sell to other collectors and dealers at wholesale levels? just curious.
when someone can't tell a post was in jest!!!
K S
Currently attempting the 12 Coin US Gold Type Set and the 20th Century US Major Coin Type Set. Completed a Franklin Half Proof Set.
<< <i>If a collector consigns to a auction aren't they trying to get full retail? If they sell on Ebay they are at least trying to get retail. >>
Auction does not necessarily mean you will get full retail, as evidenced in the twenty-odd lots I consigned to Heritage that sold without even reaching gray sheet bid. Add on to that the coins I, and many others have sold on eBay for less than bid.
When you sell something, anything, there is nothing wrong for trying to get the most that you can. Dealers have no problem asking WAY MORE than retail for their coins, so what difference does it make if I do? The price you realize is what a willing buyer is going to pay a willing seller. Somretimes it's retail or more, sometimes it's less.
Cheers,
Bob
RUSS with all those stinkin' Kennedys'!
NEVER LET HIPPO MOUTH OVERLOAD HUMMINGBIRD BUTT!!!
WORK HARDER!!!!
Millions on WELFARE depend on you!
<< <i>Ebay sellers who will not sell outside there own country. >>
It really is sad that so many sellers, myself included, will not sell outside the US. Unfortunately, the problems with foreign exchange, lack of insurance, and, above all, out-of control scammers has killed my interest in doing so.
<< <i>
I will up you one
Ahhh... it does feel better to vent!
<< <i><< What is your current pet peave? >>
when someone can't tell a post was in jest!!!
K S >>
No pet peave that relates to here or coins but I do agree with the above statement.
Ken
PS: maybe the lack of pictured 19th century coins would be a minor peave.
People thinkin all these cat puke tarnished junk coins are beautiful
I wrote on the first page "Collectors who try to sell at full retail or more". I guess I need to clairify that. I am a collector too. I guess I sounded like a delaer saying that. What I don't like is when I try to buy from another collector and he quotes me this high price way over retail like he is the only one who has this coin. This happened to me recently. I was looking at a coin that list in Coin World trends retail at $2200. I did an an auction search to see they were selling from 1500 to 1750. The other collector wanted $2500!
FrederickCoinClub
TBT
You are the one with the money, if you don't like the price, then do what I do...WALK. Nothing gets a seller's attention more than the south end view of a northbound wallet
Coins are like anything else (unless you're talking true rarities)...if you don't like the price, pass it by; another will be along.
Cheers,
Bob
Just about everything mentioned in all the previous post, and probably the ones that follow!
<< <i>NEWPS - I hate the term. I can't even get past the term to look at the offering >>
Makes me cringe. Glad to see I'm not the only one on this one.
<< <i>This happened to me recently. I was looking at a coin that list in Coin World trends retail at $2200. I did an an auction search to see they were selling from 1500 to 1750. The other collector wanted $2500! >>
Just because "trends" and realized auction prices show a certain price range does not automatically make a particular coin only worth a certain amount. Much of what is sold, and therefore determining the pricing references, is low-end or barely made it for the grade. The collector asking $2500 for the coin may very well have been offering you a premium example worth every penny of the asking price.
"Trends", "sheets", etc. are flat useless when it comes to pricing the better quality material. Example:
I sold off my Walker Short Set recently. The coins were all graded MS64. I sold them for 50% over Greysheet - to a dealer. Why did they bring that much? Because they were likely the best looking group for the grade the dealer had seen. They were well worth the premium.
Russ, NCNE
Terms like "Unsearched", "Scarce", "GEM BU", "PQ", etc., to prey on people who really don't know better.
People who deliberately wait to post feedback until I've posted mine after receiving items I've purchased, as a fallback for possible retaliation, just in case they don't like to hear (or read) the truth. I see it all the time.
Listings that include replicas. eBay should have a catagory strictly for listing junk.
Just a small sample.
Keep smiling!
Craig
I like 3-cent SILVER Trimes... I hate when eBayers try to claim that their 3-cent NICKELS are either silver or Trimes.
I hate fuzy photos...
I hate all-cap descriptions...
I hate people who don't agree with me all the time... ( Sorry, I couldn't resist that one...
My Coin Website
My Professional Website
People who refuse to look beyond their own nose, and think their opinion is the only one that has merit.
Ebay sellers who use LQQK, L@@K or L00K in their auction titles.
<< <i>Ebay sellers who use LQQK, L@@K or L00K in their auction titles. >>
You mean like this?
Russ, NCNE