Anyone going to the Fremont, Cal. show this weekend?

Saturday and Sunday.
Just a local show, but I have had fun attending and will do so on Sunday for a few hours.
Just a local show, but I have had fun attending and will do so on Sunday for a few hours.
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NSDR - Life Member
SSDC - Life Member
ANA - Pay As I Go Member
<< <i>I'll go ... do you have an address? It will give me another chance to see WTCG ... man, that guy is everywhere
SATURDAY MARCH 31st 10am - 5pm
SUNDAY APRIL 1st 11am - 4pm
ELKS HALL
38991 Farwell Drive
(I-880, exit Mowry Avenue east, left at first light)
Fremont, California
FREE ADMISSION
FREE PARKING
http://www.coinshows.com/fremont_ncna.html
NSDR - Life Member
SSDC - Life Member
ANA - Pay As I Go Member
Authorized dealer for PCGS, PCGS Currency, NGC, NCS, PMG, CAC. Member of the PNG, ANA. Member dealer of CoinPlex and CCE/FACTS as "CH5"
RJ
Yeah, Ill do some buying.
W.C. Fields
I spent a full hour with John McIntosh and picked up a nice piece of copper from him ... it is in a NGC holder, but I am sure that it will cross. Excuse the horrible scan, the coin is much lighter in color and has excellent surfaces ... in fact, two other people came back to buy it while I was sitting at his table. And, yes, I flipped him for the price ... and he won
NSDR - Life Member
SSDC - Life Member
ANA - Pay As I Go Member
Afterwards I broused the bourse for about 30 minutes. Saw some nice coins, but many were seriosuly overpriced (i.e. $40.00 for a 1960 widge proof set and $900.00 for a widger 1950 proof set). Had no real interest in sticking around and spending money. So I left without a single purchase.
Wandering around the bourse there wasn't much that was particularly interesting. Wei had a nice NGC MS63* 1884-CC reverse toner, and a really pretty 1939(?) Mercury proof toner, but they were out of my range for an impulse buy. There was a 1951-S Franklin in NGC MS65 that had some quite nice toning, but the dealer wanted too much for it.
Back in the late 1980's early 1990's I built a complete set of Peace dollars in (rattler) PCGS MS64/65. Many of them would have upgraded a point by today's standards. I sold the set in the mid 1990's, but have always liked the Peace dollar design. When a show is a total bust I'll stop by a couple dealers tables and see what sort of raw Peace dollars they've got, generally purchasing them in the AU58 to MS63 range. I am not a VAM kind of guy, I just like the design... they are big hunks of silver, and you can always walk away from a show with a pretty generic piece or two for dirt cheap.
I stopped at John McIntosh's table and found several Peace dollars that caught my eye. I ended up buying two, a 1934-D in ~MS62 that had some doubling on the obverse face. Last night several board members, notably Pharmer, were kind enough to help me find the vamworld.com site and attribute the piece for me. It turned out to be a VAM-3 medium-D DDO. The second Peace dollar I got was a 1921 with booming luster and the BEST frigging strike I've seen in a Looooooong time... full hair on the obverse and full feathers where the legs attach to the body on the reverse. It had a noticeable scratch on the cheek/jaw though so it would not grade better than a 62. Still, with the luster and the strike it was a definite keeper.
I looked at the 2 coins when I got home and noticed something on the 1921 in the light that I had not noticed at the show. You know how the eagles on Peace dollars will often have a "halo" around them caused by the metal movement? Hidden in it directly ABOVE the eagle's back was some very well done toolwork. P#SSED me off. The coin was a no brainer unc coin with a great strike... even if there was a h#llacious ding on the reverse at most it would have dropped the coin to a 60, and due to the ding on the cheek/jaw it would never go higher than a 62. So some chowderhead (although I will grant you a quite talented chowderhead), has screwed up one of the rare 1921's with a REALLY good strike for at most $20 or so. Given the amount of time tooling like that must take I can't believe it was worth his time.
I talked to John MacIntosh about it this morning on the phone and he was willing to give me a full refund no questions asked. I'd like to publicly thank him for doing so. There are enough times that we all complain about bad dealers. I think it is important we talk about good dealers too when they stand behind their product. Truth be told, I'm not sure if I'll return the 1921 or not because it does have a VERY nice strike for the date, and the luster is really sweet too, ah well, have to figure that out by the Santa Clara show.
U.S. Type Set
Rob
"Those guys weren't Fathers they were...Mothers."