What would you do?

As many of you know, I am attempting to put together an Anacs Certificate Type set. Right now all of my purchases are in a 7070. My dilema is that some of the coins are pretty high grades such as a 66 Morgan and a 66 Walker. Would you leave them in the 7070 risking getting a slide mark on them and significantly reducing the value or would you take the higher grades stuff and put it in plastic?
JJ
JJ
Need a Barber Half with ANACS photo certificate. If you have one for sale please PM me. Current Ebay auctions
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"La Vostra Nonna Ha Faccia Del Fungo"
<< <i>Personally, I would leave them in the plastic, rather than risking damaging them. >>
<< <i>Personally, I would leave them in the plastic, rather than risking damaging them. >>
None of them are in plastic to begin with. Many of them come in the original PVC softflips. After a good rinse in acetone they go into the 7070. I would have to submitt them if I wanted them in plastic.
JJ
is it at all possible to put them in air-tites THEN in the 7070's?
<< <i>
<< <i>Personally, I would leave them in the plastic, rather than risking damaging them. >>
None of them are in plastic to begin with. Many of them come in the original PVC softflips. After a good rinse in acetone they go into the 7070. I would have to submitt them if I wanted them in plastic.
JJ >>
Love it when people don't listen.
<< <i>
<< <i>Personally, I would leave them in the plastic, rather than risking damaging them. >>
None of them are in plastic to begin with. Many of them come in the original PVC softflips. After a good rinse in acetone they go into the 7070. I would have to submitt them if I wanted them in plastic.
JJ >>
Aha... I would think that as long as you're very careful putting the coins into the album, the chances of them being damaged from storage in a PVC holder are much greater than the chance of slide marks.
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
<< <i>I'd leave 'em in the 7070 and leave the 7070 in the SDB. >>
I'd leave 'em in the 7070 and leave the 7070 in your home.
<< <i>I'd slab 'em, sell 'em and replace them with lower grade coins to keep in a 7070. >>
This makes good sense...except that ANACS Certificate coins are probably hard to find any more...
Place the coin in from the front of the page, leave the back slide in.
Using a soft cloth push the coin all the way back to the reverse of the page to the back slide.
This will leave enough clearance that when you put in the front side slide it will not rub the coin.
When you remove the coin from the albulm take the front slide out and push on the reverse slide to pop the coin out.
GrandAm
You also mentioned you dip some because of the PVC flips. So, the part I don't get is they need to be in the Anacs Certificate, yet don't stay there. (stman scratching head)
But, have fun whatever you're doing.
<< <i>I guess the part I'm not getting is, you are putting together an Anacs Certificate Type set. Yet you take them out of these holders and put them in 7070.
You also mentioned you dip some because of the PVC flips. So, the part I don't get is they need to be in the Anacs Certificate, yet don't stay there. (stman scratching head)
But, have fun whatever you're doing. >>
The anacs certificate grading was nothing more than a coin graded and photographed and then stuck in PVC flip early days and then a safe flip latter 80's and stapled to the card. It was never encapsulated like we think of today.
JJ
<< <i>
<< <i>I guess the part I'm not getting is, you are putting together an Anacs Certificate Type set. Yet you take them out of these holders and put them in 7070.
You also mentioned you dip some because of the PVC flips. So, the part I don't get is they need to be in the Anacs Certificate, yet don't stay there. (stman scratching head)
But, have fun whatever you're doing. >>
The anacs certificate grading was nothing more than a coin graded and photographed and then stuck in PVC flip early days and then a safe flip latter 80's and stapled to the card. It was never encapsulated like we think of today.
JJ >>
Like I said, I don't get the part that you want to buy them like this..... yet don't keep them in these holders. My point is why do they have to be in these holders if they don't stay there? Just curious is all.