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my coin got trashed

some time ago i went to long beach and bought an ms-63 lafayette (pcgs) from one of the well known commem specialists. i was pleased with it so i was kind of showing it around. i dont know a lot of people there so i was kind of showing it around sort of at random. one dealer asked to see it. as it turned out he had an ms61 pcgs for sale in his inventory. he went on an on about how his coin clearly had better strike and lustre and cooler toning and all that. it made me feel ripped off. i guess that was his intent.

i was reminded of this when i read mark's post about whether or not it's tacky to comment on people's ebay coins on this msg board.
Here's to it and to it again.
If you don't do it when you get to it,
You'll never get to it to do it again.

Comments

  • 19Lyds19Lyds Posts: 26,492 ✭✭✭✭
    He was just trying to make himself feel better. Your happiness with it is all that matters.
    I decided to change calling the bathroom the John and renamed it the Jim. I feel so much better saying I went to the Jim this morning.



    The name is LEE!
  • airplanenutairplanenut Posts: 22,402 ✭✭✭✭✭


    << <i>He was just trying to make himself feel better. Your happiness with it is all that matters. >>

    And probably trying to get you to do a near trade from a 63 to a 61. I'd venture to say he's a jerk.
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  • BarndogBarndog Posts: 20,515 ✭✭✭✭✭
    why didn't the AH resubmit it, as it was an obvious lock upgrade image
  • 66RB66RB Posts: 2,516 ✭✭✭
    CheckersFred....I know how you feel. I showed the following coin around after I bought it, as I was very happy to finally get this coin.
    One dealer said with great authority and rather loudly, "Do not, under ANY circumstances, crack this coin out, this grade is a gift."
    Another remarked, "Why did you buy this? I would never buy something like this" or some such BS.

    Yes, the coin was cleaned at some point in the past, just like most of the raw coins these guys are stocking.
    Ha!Ha! I didn't let it get me down at all, and I love this coin!
    image
    image
  • LeianaLeiana Posts: 4,349
    I have had similar experiences, one time I showed a fellow coin club member my favorite buffalo (see sigline photo) and he said it was a 'nice AU.' imageimage

    I'm pretty sure it's a 64. image

    He didn't mean it to be mean, though. So in that respect it's different.

    -Amanda
    image

    I'm a YN working on a type set!

    My Buffalo Nickel Website Home of the Quirky Buffaloes Collection!

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  • ddbirdddbird Posts: 3,168 ✭✭✭


    << <i>CheckersFred....I know how you feel. I showed the following coin around after I bought it, as I was very happy to finally get this coin.
    One dealer said with great authority and rather loudly, "Do not, under ANY circumstances, crack this coin out, this grade is a gift."
    Another remarked, "Why did you buy this? I would never buy something like this" or some such BS.

    Yes, the coin was cleaned at some point in the past, just like most of the raw coins these guys are stocking.
    Ha!Ha! I didn't let it get me down at all, and I love this coin!
    image
    image >>




    Checkers he was just being a jerk. Keep it if it makes you happy.

    Love the toning on that coin! Id buy it!

    Same thing with my piece. I love it, and was so excited to get it. Showing it around..most said it was nice. But one said Recolored POS and barely market acceptable. They then said to get rid of it as quick as possible.

    I kept it..and have been offered more than what I paid for it. But I still like it. Even if it was recolored, its a beautiful coin!

    image
  • coinguy1coinguy1 Posts: 13,484 ✭✭✭
    Fred, here is a bit of "feedback" to do as you wish with..... image

    If you show coins to people, you should expect comments, whether positive or negative. Depending upon the individuals involved, some of the remarks will be informed, while others might not be. Some of the viewers will be unbiased, but others might have an agenda, whether they are even aware of it or not.

    My question to you is - when you looked at the MS61 and heard the dealer's comments, did they seem on point/fair in comparing the two coins? Perhaps his coin was under-graded, perhaps yours was over-graded, maybe each of those was the case and perhaps neither was the case. Learn what you can when you have the opportunity and enjoy your coins.image
  • 09sVDB09sVDB Posts: 2,420 ✭✭✭
    It happens all the time. Some times i'm tempted to buy a low priced raw coin at a certian grade(just for fun) and then show it around to see how far it dowmgrades when it's yours and not theirs. It's the same as buying a used car!
  • LongacreLongacre Posts: 16,717 ✭✭✭
    I showed an early New Orleans quarter eagle that I bought to a local yokel coin dealer (I purchased the coin from a world-renouned authority on Southern Gold). The local dealer went on and on about how ugly the coin was, how it was all grimy, how he would never sell a coin that looked like that, etc., etc. I just found it comical.
    Always took candy from strangers
    Didn't wanna get me no trade
    Never want to be like papa
    Working for the boss every night and day
    --"Happy", by the Rolling Stones (1972)
  • stmanstman Posts: 11,352 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Very normal for Dealers to "POO POO" coins that didn't come from them. The truth and the reality, sometimes it's not worth your time and aggravation to show a coin to a Dealer, that came from another Dealer. The reality is with many dealers...... if they can't buy it, or sell it they really don't even care to see your coin. So if you show it to them, expect the POO POO response. Now some dealers do enjoy to see a nice coin. And will comment a fair opinion. For the others.... IMO, and what I have seen and gone through....... if they can't do any business with it, they really don't care about your coin.
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  • Putting down a coin someone just bought (especially if they're beaming with pride at their accomplishment) is just plain low. I have a friend who does something similar: I'll buy something, I'll say how happy I am with it and how I'm glad I found it, and just to piss on my parade, he'll say either that I paid more than I should've or that I didn't need what I bought at all.

    Don't let jerks get you down!
    If you haven't noticed, I'm single and miserable and I've got four albums of bitching about it that I would offer as proof.

    -- Adam Duritz, of Counting Crows


    My Ebay Auctions
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  • CladiatorCladiator Posts: 18,256 ✭✭✭✭✭


    << <i>Very normal for Dealers to "POO POO" coins that didn't come from them. The truth and the reality, sometimes it's not worth your time and aggravation to show a coin to a Dealer, that came from another Dealer. The reality is with many dealers...... if they can't buy it, or sell it they really don't even care to see your coin. So if you show it to them, expect the POO POO response. Now some dealers do enjoy to see a nice coin. And will comment a fair opinion. For the others.... IMO, and what I have seen and gone through....... if they can't do any business with it, they really don't care about your coin. >>

    image
  • USCGCraigUSCGCraig Posts: 1,008 ✭✭
    When I worked at a shop part-time, the dealer, his staff and I would always do our best to remark positively on a coin that someone was just showing us. Chances wre, that if we were positive, there might be a sale in the near future. We would also end it with a phrase of ot to the effect of "If I was to buy this piece, I would be in the $### neighborhood". If they wanted to sell it right thenh and there, we made good on our offer. We got more coins and collections this way because we wouldn't put peoples coins down. We would render an honest opinion if they asked re: cleaning, coin being genuine etc.

    I've been to shows where every coin you have gets put down. Don't need to do business with them. Heck, dealers do it to each other as well.
    Coast Guard Craig

    Looking for Denmark 1874 20-Kroner. Please offer.
  • BillJonesBillJones Posts: 34,843 ✭✭✭✭✭
    The average Lafayette Dollar is either darkly toned and unattractive or it has been cleaned because it was dark and unattractive and now is white and unattractive. Most MS-61 coins are sliders, and/or they will almost certainly have a bothersome mark that reduces their eye appeal. The only ways that that dealer’s coin was better than yours was if his coin was massively undergraded (very unlikely) or you coin was overgraded, which is more likely, but far from a “lock.”

    One thing that collectors should remember that dealers are most happy when they are making sales. Showing a dealer a coin that you just bought at a show, especially a piece that cost over $1,000, will only make the dealer think to himself, “Darn! I wish I had made that sale!” As a result you might end up with the reaction you got. After all, the dealer’s reaction is only natural.

    When you buy a coin at a show, don’t expect the dealers to be cheering your purchases on unless they sold the item to you. You should also not expect to get an objective opinion from many dealers when you ask their opinion about something you are thinking of buying from someone else. AND definitely don’t expect to get an objective opinion from a dealer if he is within earshot of the prospective seller. Dealers usually try to get along with each other most of the time, and trashing someone else’s coin in front of them is not a way to keep on being good friends.
    Retired dealer and avid collector of U.S. type coins, 19th century presidential campaign medalets and selected medals. In recent years I have been working on a set of British coins - at least one coin from each king or queen who issued pieces that are collectible. I am also collecting at least one coin for each Roman emperor from Julius Caesar to ... ?
  • CladiatorCladiator Posts: 18,256 ✭✭✭✭✭
    BillJones has some good points.

    I believe this is why I greatly prefer working with dealers that are infact collectors as well. These dealer/collectors seem to be able to appreciate coins more for the same reasons us collectors do. Many folks that are only dealers, in my opinion, only see dollar signs and that drives their comments. One dealer/collector that comes to mind right off the top of my head is Dick Osburn. I can go to his table and peruse a dozen of his coins without buying anything, then show him a seated half dime I bought from someone else earlier in the day and get a true collectors opinion on the coin from him.

    My advice, for what it's worth, find the dealers you like and work well with and stick with them. The rest of them can go pound salt image
  • 53BKid53BKid Posts: 2,176 ✭✭✭
    It's just that type of dealer that gives this hobby/profession a bad name.

    I think we all have to realize that there are some egos out there that didn't develop beyond the third grade. I've known barnyard animals with better personalities!
    HAPPY COLLECTING!!!
  • Hi all,

    I just wanted to point out that as a person entering into the coin collecting arena this forum is GREAT! As a newbie (I mean just hatched) this place seems to be a wealth of knowledge. My first ever purchase was a downer...I bought a 1913 $5 Indian. Don't know why it just grabbed my attention. The fact that the design was sunken (if you can call it that) into the coin was different. Anyways, after I bought it I read about fake gold coins so of to the coin shop I went. I told him I had just started collecting and blah blah blah. After he eyeballed it under the glass he looked up and said its nice, I would say around Very Fine closer to Extra Fine. I asked if he thought $160 was a fair purchase on it and he looked at it again and after much length I might add he said ahhhh actually its in Good condition....I don't think this is actually a my coin got trashed (it might be considered that) but I thought right away as I walked out...Great! I am entering a hobby that is going to make me feel like I am an idiot and overpaid anytime I purchase a coin. I wondered if the price I paid made him second guess his own initial look. Guess I will never know but it wasn't the greatest first experience. Please someone tell me recognizing the grade at least to some close proximity gets better with time image
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  • michaelmichael Posts: 9,524 ✭✭✭
    remember my friend that successful dealers have an acid eye when buying or apprasinig coins you show them bought from other coin sellers

    and a tender loving eye when they have coins they are trying to sell
  • Putting down a coin someone just bought (especially if they're beaming with pride at their accomplishment) is just plain low.

    If you just bought an artificially toned, overgraded or problem coin but simply do not have enough experience to be able to tell for yourself, you can only benefit from getting an honest opinion from someone who can.

    If someone who has a better eye gives you happy talk instead of their true thoughts they are doing you a disservice. The truth may hurt but if you can gain some sort of education out of the process you're better off in the long run.

    I'm talking about honest, straightforward opinions from a knowledgable grader and not anything which might have to do with head games that certain dealers might want to play.
  • relicsncoinsrelicsncoins Posts: 8,111 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I would be curious to know what that dealer told the seller of that 61 when he bought it..........."Well it's technically uncirculated, but it's really not much of a collectable grade. I know the book says it's worth X amount of dollars, but that is a grade I will have a hard time selling, so I'm willing to give you Y amount of dollars for it. "

    JJ
    Need a Barber Half with ANACS photo certificate. If you have one for sale please PM me. Current Ebay auctions
  • fishcookerfishcooker Posts: 3,446 ✭✭

    If you're going to care about what others you don't know think, be prepared.

  • roadrunnerroadrunner Posts: 28,313 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Many, many dealers out there are very poor at technical grading and moreso at altered surfaces and AT. Take it with a grain of salt. It just means you can buy more cheaply from them when they get something equivalent in the store or on the bourse.

    roadrunner
    Barbarous Relic No More, LSCC -GoldSeek--shadow stats--SafeHaven--321gold


  • << <i>Putting down a coin someone just bought (especially if they're beaming with pride at their accomplishment) is just plain low.

    If you just bought an artificially toned, overgraded or problem coin but simply do not have enough experience to be able to tell for yourself, you can only benefit from getting an honest opinion from someone who can.

    If someone who has a better eye gives you happy talk instead of their true thoughts they are doing you a disservice. The truth may hurt but if you can gain some sort of education out of the process you're better off in the long run.

    I'm talking about honest, straightforward opinions from a knowledgable grader and not anything which might have to do with head games that certain dealers might want to play. >>



    I don't deny that it's important to get honest opinions about your purchases. But there's certainly a way to do it that doesn't make the person learning feel like crap/an idiot. I think of it like someone showing you a new shirt or a new pair of pants. If someone shows you a new shirt, and you turn around and say, "It's as ugly as an elephant's ass and you paid too much for it.", how's that gonna make the person feel? And to then turn around and compare it to something you have is even worse. There's a very big difference between someone showing you a coin to get it appraised and someone showing you a coin to share in the thrill of their purchase. I don't have children, but I'll take a wild guess and say that if those of you who do have children showed them to someone, you'd be at least mildly offended if the person started insulting their appearance.

    Commenting on a coin someone is thinking of purchasing, or commenting on a coin someone asks for an opinion on, are both entirely different things. That's a situation that calls for a critical assessment -- and a conservative one, at that. But to act that way to someone who's basically just saying, "Hey, look at this cool coin I just got!" just doesn't cut it with me. Something about that just lacks empathy.




    If you haven't noticed, I'm single and miserable and I've got four albums of bitching about it that I would offer as proof.

    -- Adam Duritz, of Counting Crows


    My Ebay Auctions
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  • LincolnCentManLincolnCentMan Posts: 5,347 ✭✭✭✭
    I wouldnt put any stock in what the dealer said. At the very least, he was rude to dis your coin under those circumstances.

    David

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