Walker Proof Digital Album Fellas, leave the tight pants to the ladies. If I can count the coins in your pockets you better use them to call a tailor. Stay thirsty my friends......
If Al's selling them, then there are people collecting them.
IMHO, probably one of the top market maker major error dealers I'm aware of besides Fred and Mike Byers.
Hey Fred.. what say you on this question?
Steve
U.S. Air Force Security Forces Retired
In memory of the USAF Security Forces lost: A1C Elizabeth N. Jacobson, 9/28/05; SSgt Brian McElroy, 1/22/06; TSgt Jason Norton, 1/22/06; A1C Lee Chavis, 10/14/06; SSgt John Self, 5/14/07; A1C Jason Nathan, 6/23/07; SSgt Travis Griffin, 4/3/08; 1Lt Joseph Helton, 9/8/09; SrA Nicholas J. Alden, 3/3/2011. God Bless them and all those who have lost loved ones in this war. I will never forget their loss.
im kinda surprised that the fragment was actually graded. I could see genuine as a 25 cent quarter but really can you assign a grade to a fragment??? Youll have a hard time selling that to me. Its like on the currency side have a corner of a note get cut off at the BEP and someone sending it out for grading. I dont think theres enough there to grade and really all a respectable grading service should do ( in my eyes) is slab it genuine. cause What makes a fragment that small a 62 63 or 64 It isnt clear fields and lack of bag marks or coin/coin hits, sure isnt high spots of washington or the reverse design. I dont see it
Founder of the NDCCA. *WAM Count : 025. *NDCCA Database Count : 2,610. *You suck 6/24/10. In memory of Tiggar 5/21/1994 - 5/28/2010
<< <i>Everyone here would collect it just at different price points. If found in change or in a mint bag not a single one of us would throw it back. >>
If it exists, someone, somewhere, collects it. I have seen string collections, rubber band collections, even belly button lint. Do not try to understand it, just what people do. Cheers, RickO
...there are many who make a lifetime endeavor out of simply collecting dust... sitting on their derierre (no offense intended to any who want to get up and around but are unable to do so)
I once knew a kid back in grammer school (is it still called that these days?) ... he actually collected his boogers ... needless to say, I only went to his house to play one time...
Re: Slabbed coins - There are some coins that LIVE within clear plastic and wear their labels with pride... while there are others that HIDE behind scratched plastic and are simply dragged along by a label. Then there are those coins that simply hang out, naked and free
Gonna quickly address a few things about the coin linked in the OP:
1. The holder says "multistruck fragment" but most likely it is part of a terminal stage die cap which fell apart. It looks like that piece fell between the dies and was struck one more time for good measure before finally ejecting.
2. I've always been told that the grade on a misstruck coin is based only on the portion struck with the design. Personally I don't see any reason to give something like that a numeric grade at all since the value is not tied to it whatsoever.
3. Yes, people actually collect stuff like this. The price doesn't seem out of line either, struck fragments from the late 1990s aren't really scarce but most of the ones I've seen have been on cents, to have a piece like that which can be identified from a first-year state quarter is pretty special.
Sean Reynolds
Incomplete planchets wanted, especially Lincoln Cents & type coins.
"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 once knew a kid back in grammer school (is it still called that these days?) ... he actually collected his boogers ... needless to say, I only went to his house to play one time... >>
Thanks for sharing that with us.
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>I once knew a kid back in grammer school (is it still called that these days?) ... he actually collected his boogers ... needless to say, I only went to his house to play one time... >>
SeaEagleCoins, They're Nose Trophies!
To Err Is Human.... To Collect Err's Is Just Too Much Darn Tootin Fun!
Comments
Fellas, leave the tight pants to the ladies. If I can count the coins in your pockets you better use them to call a tailor. Stay thirsty my friends......
Ron
Lane
See http://www.doubledimes.com for a free online reference for US twenty-cent pieces
<< <i>Looks like a shot 64 to me. MJ
I dont know MJ, it looks like it needs a + next to your 64
EAC 6024
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If you slab it,,,,,,, someone will buy it,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
GrandAm
IMHO, probably one of the top market maker major error dealers I'm aware of besides Fred and Mike Byers.
Hey Fred.. what say you on this question?
Steve
In memory of the USAF Security Forces lost: A1C Elizabeth N. Jacobson, 9/28/05; SSgt Brian McElroy, 1/22/06; TSgt Jason Norton, 1/22/06; A1C Lee Chavis, 10/14/06; SSgt John Self, 5/14/07; A1C Jason Nathan, 6/23/07; SSgt Travis Griffin, 4/3/08; 1Lt Joseph Helton, 9/8/09; SrA Nicholas J. Alden, 3/3/2011. God Bless them and all those who have lost loved ones in this war. I will never forget their loss.
"Keep your malarkey filter in good operating order" -Walter Breen
EAC 6024
<< <i>Honestly looks like a shoe to me. >>
I didn't know the U.S. Mint made Monopoly Tokens?
And, I didn't know ANACS graded them?
Ron
<< <i>Everyone here would collect it just at different price points. If found in change or in a mint bag not a single one of us would throw it back. >>
Agreed. I would collect it at a -$10 price point
<< <i>Agreed. I would collect it at a -$10 price point >>
Cool - an easy ten bucks. Please ship the fragment and ten dollars to my address
<< <i>Honestly looks like a shoe to me. >>
HaHa! That's the first thing I thought too!
...there are many who make a lifetime endeavor out of simply collecting dust... sitting on their derierre
I once knew a kid back in grammer school (is it still called that these days?) ... he actually collected his boogers
1. The holder says "multistruck fragment" but most likely it is part of a terminal stage die cap which fell apart. It looks like that piece fell between the dies and was struck one more time for good measure before finally ejecting.
2. I've always been told that the grade on a misstruck coin is based only on the portion struck with the design. Personally I don't see any reason to give something like that a numeric grade at all since the value is not tied to it whatsoever.
3. Yes, people actually collect stuff like this. The price doesn't seem out of line either, struck fragments from the late 1990s aren't really scarce but most of the ones I've seen have been on cents, to have a piece like that which can be identified from a first-year state quarter is pretty special.
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 once knew a kid back in grammer school (is it still called that these days?) ... he actually collected his boogers
Thanks for sharing that with us.
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>I once knew a kid back in grammer school (is it still called that these days?) ... he actually collected his boogers
SeaEagleCoins, They're Nose Trophies!
Placing a grade on such a piece is a joke, it maybe MS if it stood for Mangled Steel...
what's next... The sweepings off the Mint Floor...
Currently Listed: Nothing
Take Care, Dave
It's kind of neat but I wouldn't pay more than $5 for it.
Here's one of mine, please excuse the poor photo.
I also have two other struck wheat cent fragments I purchased a while back.
This one is one I've bought from a board member:
For me, grade is not necessarily a factor when it comes to mint errors. The uniqueness comes first.
Ben