What's the most overgraded coin you have ever SOLD?
Raw or slabbed.
Sure, you should be ashamed.
But this is your chance to brag!
Sure, you should be ashamed.
But this is your chance to brag!
Andy Lustig
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
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Comments
Russ, NCNE
Money wise I lost my a$$ but got a real nice SLQ in exchange. Hmmm.....maybe I did not lose my a$$.
If I sell a coin that I think is a Pig I call it a Pig. A couple have made decent money but they were still called pigs.
Ken
<< <i>Probably this one. >>
That this coin sold for that much money is yet more evidence that many registry set collectors care less about the quality of the coin than the number on the slab.
When I relisted it, it still sold for over $300.
I call this the "you have to be wrong because PCGS says differently" eBay syndrome. You can list a dog turd, but if it's in a PCGS slab somebody is still going to buy it, and usually for far more than it's worth.
Russ, NCNE
I said in the auction, "it looks overgraded to me, but who are you going to believe, me or PCGS?"
Tom
<< <i>You can list a dog turd, but if it's in a PCGS slab somebody is still going to buy it, and usually for far more than it's worth. >>
HEYYYY!!!!! David Hall !!!! New registry set idea......
As long as that turd isn't AT....
My icon IS my coin. It is a gem 1949 FBL Franklin.
<< <i>I had an 1869 indian cent I sent to PCGS. It was clearly an VF-30 coin. It came back in an AU-55 holder. Sold it on eBay to Jay Parino at "The Mint". He paid very strong money and left me a positive.
I said in the auction, "it looks overgraded to me, but who are you going to believe, me or PCGS?"
Tom >>
Truth in Advertising™
I'd be disgusted with both of you if i could stop laughing long enough to do so.
Check out my current listings: https://ebay.com/sch/khunt/m.html?_ipg=200&_sop=12&_rdc=1
Came back in a 65 holder and I promptly sold it to a brick and mortar dealer for Greysheet bid.
I smiled all the way home.
It was several years ago and PCGS has been making up for it with my submissions ever since.
John Marnard Keynes, The Economic Consequences of the Peace, 1920, page 235ff
-Daniel
-Aristotle
Dum loquimur fugerit invida aetas. Carpe diem quam minimum credula postero.
-Horace
<< <i>If you can be that honest AND make a little (or a living) then GOD bless America. Russ, I admire the fact that you walk the walk. Would not hesitate to bid on anything you have! >>
I agree
Fly-In Club
My PCGS Registry Sets
Put it up on eBay on a bet with a friend (I bet it would sell): didn't say anything about the coin but the pic of the obverse showed perfectly the extensive surface wear on the device. Darn thing got almost Price Guide.
I contacted the buyer, explained this was an XF coin and offered to send him an honest MS63. He accepted.
Rob
Questions about Ikes? Go to The IKE GROUP WEB SITE
<< <i>I dumped a 1901 S quarter NGC VG-08 at Long Beach 2 years ago--Jack Beymer said he would call it a G-06. >>
And he would, too, even if he sold it in the VG-8 slab.
$3500
$7500
$15000
I sold it for the $15,000. But today, it would probably be a decent MS65. In 15 years nothing has really changed all that much. 3 grades for the same coin...not all that unusual.
roadrunner
... and I thought to myself, "Man, this third party grading stuff is easy..."
Sean Reynolds
"Keep in mind that most of what passes as numismatic information is no more than tested opinion at best, and marketing blather at worst. However, I try to choose my words carefully, since I know that you guys are always watching." - Joe O'Connor
So I lamented more.... I would be unhappy buying that as an MS69 and getting a coin with a clear hit on it. So I took it to a coin show and sold it to a dealer, sight seen. I got $875... same as the nice MS69s.
I view the dealer being an expert and the sight seen as relieving me of the moral responsibility I would have felt to fully describe the hit if I listed it on the boards or e-bay.
Like my old car.... great Toyota Camry, served me well for 15 years and over 100,000 miles (Yes, low miles for 15 years). By this time the clutch started to slip, the brakes needed work, and the paint was bably oxidized. The KBB value for private sale was about $1,400. The needed repairs would have been near that, with the value after repair no higher. I took it to every dealer outside the base and asked what they would give offer for it. Most would not look even and made no offer. One asked to test drive it, then offered $800. I took it and ran. A few days later I saw it on his lot for $1,695 with shining wheel covers and some pin-stripes. Even later I saw it driving around town. I could not have sold it through a personal sale without disclosing known problems, but a dealer is an expert, and he offered me a low ball price.