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Would this Indian $2.50 make PO-01?
The date is unquestionably 1928 when viewed inhand, even if you can't tell from the pictures.
Anyone know where I can find price hints for ultra-low-grade pieces? Heritage isn't terribly helpful in this case...

Anyone know where I can find price hints for ultra-low-grade pieces? Heritage isn't terribly helpful in this case...

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I totally want this coin!
Please sell it to me and charge me too much.
We'll put it in Photograde Online and give you credit as the discoverer!
hrh
<< <i>I totally want this coin!
Please sell it to me and charge me too much.
We'll put it in Photograde Online and give you credit as the discoverer!
hrh >>
This thread will not make 100. The OZ has spoken
Good day, Mr Hall. That's an amazing offer.
Whatcha gonna do, jonathanb ?.... I'm curious.
``https://ebay.us/m/KxolR5
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)
i am unsure of the grade due to not studying this series but
it is the lowest grade i have ever seen of one.
``https://ebay.us/m/KxolR5
I offer $500!
That's the wholesale price for an MS62.
hrh
Joe.
<< <i>I offer $500!
That's the wholesale price for an MS62.
hrh >>
Let the bidding begin
BTW nice low grade coin.
If a coin survives down to a nub, it gets to be valuable again. So strange ...
<< <i>I totally want this coin!
Please sell it to me and charge me too much.
We'll put it in Photograde Online and give you credit as the discoverer!
hrh >>
HRH: Will it grade PO-01?
Probably thinks it's a F 04.
<< <i>All I can think of is how if the pawn makes it all the way to the other end of the board, he gets to be a Queen.
If a coin survives down to a nub, it gets to be valuable again. So strange ... >>
Yes, soon there will be sweatshops of school age children in the Far East spending their days wearing down US gold coins to later be sold on ebay.
$500?
SOLD! Run Forrest....Run
The measure of intelligence is the ability to change.
Albert Einstein (14 March 1879--18 April 1955)
<< <i> There ain't much of a market for those and if there turns out to be people will start making them like toned coins. >>
My kids are on it! They have a job, only in America
<< <i>Take the $500( get your name listed as the discoverer). Don't get greedy... >>
The measure of intelligence is the ability to change.
Albert Einstein (14 March 1879--18 April 1955)
being graded by pcgs as a P01.
i always thought the premium was due to the plastic in this case!
no submission worries and all the profit!
Odd.
<< <i>I must admit this is a confusing part of the numismatic market for me. Someone can carry around a coin like this as a pocket piece for a number of years and all of a sudden it's incredibly collectible. It's even more collectible and desirable than a higher grade coin that actually shows a lot less wear a tons of detail. Count me in as "one who just doesn't get it". >>
The price can be easily explained by a low supply. I imagine that it's harder to find gold coins worn down until they are almost unidentifiable(without being abused by, say, being run over by a U-Haul) than it is to find them in the F/AU spectrum. Even in a random event like rolling two dice, most of the numbers will be in the center of the range. I also suspect that coins that degraded are likely to be melted. This rarity doesn't bring as high a premium as the other end of the scale because of lower demand.
The desire to own the coin, OTH, is a mystery. Every person has their own motives. Rarity, "something different", collect everything mentality...
<< <i>I totally want this coin!
Please sell it to me and charge me too much.
We'll put it in Photograde Online and give you credit as the discoverer!
hrh >>
What an invitation! If it was mine you would have it. Sure it would not BB?
WTB: Barber Quarters XF
<< <i>JACK JOHNSON!!
Good spot there.
David wants it, David can have it. I got it because I thought it was cute, but I don't collect low-end pieces or gold either, so it might as well go to someone who clearly appreciates it more than I do.
Barbercoin: I was also curious about the weight. My scale is only good to 0.1 grams, though. On that scale, this weighs 4.0 grams. Redbook says it should weigh 4.18 grams, so it lost somewhere between 3-6% of its original weight, depending on how accurate my scale is. Maybe David will post an accurate weight when he gets it.
jonathan
<< <i>Nice coin. Is that natural wear? >>
AW vs. NW
And so it begins!!!!!
Ha ha ha
US and British coin collector, and creator of The Ultimate Chuck E. Cheese's and Showbiz Pizza Place Token & Ticket Guide
What would a basal state 00 be worth?
Does anyone here know how a copy of this column might be found?????
Lafayette Grading Set
You wouldn't believe how long it took to get him to sit still for this.
I assume this coin has been treated with less-than-kid gloves for the past few decades. If a few stray marks are ever market-acceptable, I think that a coin in this grade might qualify...
NSDR - Life Member
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ANA - Pay As I Go Member
<< <i>That any gold coin would obtain that much wear somehow strikes me as bizarre. >>
Might have been someone's pocket piece.
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>Love it but too many scratches IMO. I think it would get BB'd at least a few times first if you were to get a PO1 out of it. >>
If HRH wants it, then I think it will grade.