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EXTREMELY CONFUSED ABOUT THIS 1916 QUARTER

Take a look at this PCGS 1916 quarter on eBay. Never have I seen a 1916 quarter with this kind of beading on the shield. Only 1917 type 1 coins have these distinctive, sharply impressed beads. Apparently PCGS certifies it as a 16, so who am I to argue. IMO, it is a very unusual 1916.
So what do you SLQ experts think?
eBay 1916 quarter
So what do you SLQ experts think?
eBay 1916 quarter
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Edited to add: I'd almost swear that I see the base of a 7.
Actually, sharpness isn't the issue. The 1916 shield has mushy detail regardless of strike.
In honor of the memory of Cpl. Michael E. Thompson
<< <i>It might be in a PCGS slab, but without the label showing I wouldn't bid a dime. >>
Check my ebay BIN or Make Offers!!
All in all just unsettling enough that I wouldn't buy from his offerings, although in no way am I calling him crooked.
Just unsettling.
Check out my current listings: https://ebay.com/sch/khunt/m.html?_ipg=200&_sop=12&_rdc=1
Looking only at the head/border it absolutely seems like a 1916. This feature has been widely claimed to be a foolproof way to identify a dateless T1.
This coin seems not to fit with everything I've read about the diagnostics of 1916 vs 1917 T1 SLQs.
What if this coin is a 1917 but has the head-extending-into-the-border feature of the 1916? Now that would be something.
New collectors, please educate yourself before spending money on coins; there are people who believe that using numismatic knowledge to rip the naïve is what this hobby is all about.
Worry is the interest you pay on a debt you may not owe.
"Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
"Everything you say should be true, but not everything true should be said."----Voltaire
As for the other diagnostic's, I can't tell from the scan, but with the reeding cut in half at the head, that would confirm it for me.
LSCC#1864
Ebay Stuff
<< <i>Good catch. The gown line should curve slightly at the bottom and intersect with Liberty's foot. Instead it traverses up to mid-calf. Looks like they blew the attribution on this one. >>
I dont understand what your saying with the gown
The 1917 has a significantly redesigned shield, with sharp, round beads. A 1917 dateless example would still show this sharp detail on the right rim of the shield.
Look at the drapery too. In my humble opinion, The coin in question is most certainly a 1917 T-1.
The seller has lots of awesome coins, but this one doesn't rate up there with them. It is suspect, at best.
``https://ebay.us/m/KxolR5
Cameron Kiefer
<< <i>At the grade presented, it's tough to look at a scan and be 100%, but if you look at the head and notice how it cuts through the reed, that's a dead giveaway for a 1916 dated coin.
As for the other diagnostic's, I can't tell from the scan, but with the reeding cut in half at the head, that would confirm it for me. >>
I understand your point, but if you take another look at the scan, you'll notice that the head really does not cut into the reed.
<< <i>
<< <i>At the grade presented, it's tough to look at a scan and be 100%, but if you look at the head and notice how it cuts through the reed, that's a dead giveaway for a 1916 dated coin.
As for the other diagnostic's, I can't tell from the scan, but with the reeding cut in half at the head, that would confirm it for me. >>
I understand your point, but if you take another look at the scan, you'll notice that the head really does not cut into the reed. >>
I couldn't tell from the pictures, but if the head does NOT cut into the reed (I thought it did), then that seals the deal for me. I wonder if the slab really says 1916. Could be listed wrong.
New collectors, please educate yourself before spending money on coins; there are people who believe that using numismatic knowledge to rip the naïve is what this hobby is all about.
WNC Coins, LLC
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LSCC#1864
Ebay Stuff
<< <i>Why would someone slab such a low grade 1917 (Unless they thought it was a 1916 and worth a shot)? >>
I'd have to think that was it. Someone decided to put a few bucks on 16 Black and hit it.
No expert but IMO that is a 1917.
Bottom of the gown is not right, head does not go through IMO and the scan has IMO actually picked-up on the remnants of the 7.
Joe.
I finally looked at the PCGS book on Counterfiet detection and I believe that the coin is a 1917.
We need to see the holder first to tell if PCGS fudged it.
On the genuine 1916......when you inspect the head in relation to the rim.....I noticed one glaring point:
The inside star closest to Liberty's head is very faint and not struck up. Look at the pic in this thread of the 16 provided. You'll see one star to the right of the head.
Look at the pic of the 17....you'll see 2 stars clearly.
Look at the coin in question: There are TWO stars showing.
I think we have all been mislead by the fact that on the coin in question, the top hair strand is not there. If you notice on the 17 coin, that strand is not very prominently incised, and may have just worn away on the subject coin.
That......and the shield detail lead me to my conclusion.
WHEW..........I love a challenge..........and this was definitly that.
Hope this helps.
Pete
if a mechanical error, who eats the 2K?
do they follow ownership back to original submitter? (in case the current seller bought it for big bucks)
<< <i>If a mechanical error, who eats the 2K? >>
If this really is a 1917 and it's in a PCGS 1916 holder, I believe the party that would eat the $2K is...PCGS.
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In honor of the memory of Cpl. Michael E. Thompson
jim
<On a mechanical error, as this slab and coin would be considered, PCGS does not eat the buyout. Whomever gets stuck with the coin is stuck with the loss.>
Perhaps there is a need for a service to identify coins such as this? The service would have a guarantee that the label is correct. Naturally it would cost money. Clearly most very hard to identify coins would not be worth the service... ???
Kind of off-topic, but I feel a mechanical error can only be justified when it's obvious there's a slab label mistake. In this case, it wouldn't be defensible - the date is gone, and it's reasonable that the TPG would use its expertise to determine whether it was a 1916 or a 1917.
To me, a mechanical error is labeling a 1921 Peace dollar as a Morgan, or putting the wrong date on a label when the date is easily read on the coin. If this coin is slabbed as a 1916 and it turns out not to be, that's not a mechanical error, and I don't think PCGS would claim it was either.
New collectors, please educate yourself before spending money on coins; there are people who believe that using numismatic knowledge to rip the naïve is what this hobby is all about.
I am well-aware of the bisecting top reed, hair strands and drapery comparisons. But for me, it's the outer shield sharpness that is a dead giveaway. Take a look at any circulated 1916 below AU and you'll see what I mean.
How do you tell t1 from t2 one the dateless ones.
I have 180 dateless in the junk pile. Have a empty space for
t1 in the type set album. Would love to be able to attribute
1 of the 180 as a type 1
thanks
dave
<< <i>Ok, question from someone who knows alot less.
How do you tell t1 from t2 one the dateless ones.
I have 180 dateless in the junk pile. Have a empty space for
t1 in the type set album. Would love to be able to attribute
1 of the 180 as a type 1
thanks
dave >>
The easiest way is in the Type 1 Lady Liberty's right breast is bare. On the Type 2 she is wearing a chain-mail wife-beater.
silver quarters.
Found 6 types one. Really easy once you know what to look for. I just checked the star
arrangement on the back. With luck, one happened to be a denver. Filled in 3 spots tonight
I didn't expect to, 1917P & D in the old whitman album of SLQ, and type 1 in the type set
album. And 3 to spare for ebay.
For the fun of it,
dave
Pete
<< <i>
<< <i>Ok, question from someone who knows alot less.
How do you tell t1 from t2 one the dateless ones.
I have 180 dateless in the junk pile. Have a empty space for
t1 in the type set album. Would love to be able to attribute
1 of the 180 as a type 1
thanks
dave >>
The easiest way is in the Type 1 Lady Liberty's right breast is bare. On the Type 2 she is wearing a chain-mail wife-beater.
Its easier to check the reverse. The Type 1 has no stars under the eagle while the type 2 has 3 stars under the eagle.
Worry is the interest you pay on a debt you may not owe.
"Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
"Everything you say should be true, but not everything true should be said."----Voltaire
I was told that they had received a number of inquiries - I wonder how THAT happened? : ) - checked the coin out, and confirmed that it is correctly attributed as a 1916.