V Nickel back from grading, Grade Revealed

I just got my Official Guide to Coin Grading and Counterfeit Detection by PCGS today. I am so excited. So I thought it would be fun to post a coin I would like to grade. While it is posted for a day or so, I will study up on the coin and how to grade that particular version. Then at the end of the day, I will post my grade and see how I did against all you pros. For this to be a learning experience for me, please don't just put down the grade only. Please tell me what makes you feel it should get that grade. That would be tremendously helpful. thanks, lets have some fun!

"When I die I want to go peacefully in my sleep like grandpa did, not screaming like the rest of the people in his car."
--- Jack Handy
Positive BST transactions with members - Tander123, Twincam, UtahCoin, ianrussell
--- Jack Handy
Positive BST transactions with members - Tander123, Twincam, UtahCoin, ianrussell
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Comments
1st PVC
2nd Cleaned or Diped
3Rd If it would grade I will go VF-30 I think. But that is just me.
Hoard the keys.
Dark and ugly which reduces eye appeal, and surface hits.
The nickel in the picture is definitely well circulated. If an uncirculated grade is the grade you're prospecting for, it definitely won't happen.
Authorized dealer for PCGS, PCGS Currency, NGC, NCS, PMG, CAC. Member of the PNG, ANA. Member dealer of CoinPlex and CCE/FACTS as "CH5"
U.S. Nickels Complete Set with Major Varieties, Circulation Strikes
U.S. Dimes Complete Set with Major Varieties, Circulation Strikes
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2nd Cleaned or Diped
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I'm with ya on that. The darkness inside of the reverse letters as in "A" is always a dead giveaway IMO.
Also, I do not see any luster, could just be the image though.
I also think PrivateCollector gave you very good advise... Have fun
I worked on a set of Liberty nickels last year and early this year. I really love the series. The 1883 comes in two varieties. The "No cents" variety, and "with cents". The "no cents" variety is the more common of the two. Your nickel is the "no cents" variety, and is about AU50 in grade. A good visual grading guide for Liberty nickels is Here
It's hard to tell from the photo if it's been cleaned or not. (Cleaning is BAD and greatly reduces a coins value)
Welcome to the hobby! Have fun. It's a constant learning experience.
Dwayne F. Sessom
Ebay ID: V-Nickel-Coins
<< <i>It is impossible to grade a coin with certainty by looking at a picture >>
my early American coins & currency: -- http://yankeedoodlecoins.com/
can't judge from photo
I would advise you to buy a copy of The Official American Numismatic Association Grading Standards for United States Coins, (published by Whitman). That book has pictures of almost all U.S. type coins in grades ranging from Good to Mint State. It is much better than the Official Guide to Coin Grading and Counterfeit Detection. That book covers Mint State grades reasonably well, but does a poor job IMO with the circulated grades. And yes I own a couple of editions of the PCGS guide.
The coin is an original looking coin with minimal hits and light rub. the hit although light "COMPOUNDED"(the key word) with the light rub knock it down the AU55 range. Then you move to the luster / pop phase.
Starting at our AU55 range it looks like a crusty/dirty 35-40% luster remaining coin. That kind of dirt knocks down the eye appeal a little unless the luster booms through which from the picture it doesn't(I could be wrong on that since it is a picture) Taken that it is bellow avg luster / pop for a light cir it knocks it down one more grade to the AU50-53 Range lets
When you have a tweener coin as our baseline (50-53) you then access the whole package look
factor strike, location of hits, color, and desirability(key date, fav series, popular mint mark, metal, ect)
I grade(not my series though)
Out of the way hit(+),Strike(- soft), color(even),desirability(overall-)(+ first year)(- unpopular set)(- mint mark)(-copper nickel)
So since it looks a little lifeless it should go AU50 but all it takes is luster to move it up to an AU55 top grade. Although the inverse is true too that if it looks really dull it could get net graded to EF45
Some may have net graded the coin lower due to the problems mentioned which is normal.....I am just providing a details grade.
Registration for 2010 is now open; specifically, Introduction to Grading U.S. Coins.
If you are a Young Numismatist you may be able to qualify for their scholarship program.
The auction previewing is also a very good idea if not to just "see" thousands of coins at one time. However, keep in mind that grading, even among the pros, is subjective.
Have fun on your journey.
The PCGS book is good, but my experience has been that, if used as a sole resource, it is a bit too advanced for somebody just learning to grade. I strongly recommend getting a copy of "Making the Grade" by the Coin World Editors or the ANA Grading Standards. "Making the Grade" is more in line with the current marketplace than the ANA Grading Standards, but the front text in the ANA book is a pretty good read. If you are an ANA member, you can check these out for 6 weeks from the library for the cost of postage and insurance...heckuva deal.
Think about spending some one-on-one time with an experienced collector/dealer to begin the learning process. For example, offer to bring your local dealer some lunch if he/she will spend some time to give you a personalized grading lesson (dealers like food
Welcome to the hobby...there's lots to learn, but it's lots-o-fun!
Lane
See http://www.doubledimes.com for a free online reference for US twenty-cent pieces
Best regards.
Gary
<< <i>HKstrongside,
I worked on a set of Liberty nickels last year and early this year. I really love the series. The 1883 comes in two varieties. The "No cents" variety, and "with cents". The "no cents" variety is the more common of the two. Your nickel is the "no cents" variety, and is about AU50 in grade. A good visual grading guide for Liberty nickels is Here
It's hard to tell from the photo if it's been cleaned or not. (Cleaning is BAD and greatly reduces a coins value)
Welcome to the hobby! Have fun. It's a constant learning experience. >>
@ dsessom , Awesome webpage. I will study this page hard. I really love looking at liberty nickels. Thank you for the link!
--- Jack Handy
Positive BST transactions with members - Tander123, Twincam, UtahCoin, ianrussell
As far as luster, I think the coin is fairly dull in hand. If what I understand luster to be, I would say slim to none.
--- Jack Handy
Positive BST transactions with members - Tander123, Twincam, UtahCoin, ianrussell
--- Jack Handy
Positive BST transactions with members - Tander123, Twincam, UtahCoin, ianrussell
<< <i>EF45...Libert is still visable..some wear in the stars but mostly good.....reverse worn details >>
Stars worn?
I don't think so, here is an MS64 example.......
I think the coin you posted looks 100% natural to me (i'm unsure about the dark spot at 3 o'clock on the reverse but it looks Kosher to me) and AU+ in my eyes.
IMHO you need to find another coin to test your grading skills on, the coin you posted looks like to nice of an example.
and
"Mint state examples of the Liberty Head nickel typically are well struck overall, though those coined from worn dies will exhibit some softening around the stars and peripheral legends."
Ray
--- Jack Handy
Positive BST transactions with members - Tander123, Twincam, UtahCoin, ianrussell
--- Jack Handy
Positive BST transactions with members - Tander123, Twincam, UtahCoin, ianrussell