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Do you think I should submit my NCS "conserved" coins for Secure Plus grading?

I mean, just going from that coin sniffer video, that dog sounds like it really bites. Do you think if I tell them in advance these are NCS "conserved" coins, and not "doctored" coins, they'll keep that dog on a leash?
Seriously, would you ever send one of these coins in to Secure Plus? That's really all I'm asking...
Seriously, would you ever send one of these coins in to Secure Plus? That's really all I'm asking...
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- Bob -

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Central Valley Roosevelts
<< <i>It depends on what they did to conserve the coin. Does NGC place ALL conserved coins in NCS holders? If NGC doesn't place them in NGC holders, I'd think PCGS wouldn't place them in PCGS holders either? >>
NGC doesn't have a security dog.
<< <i>
<< <i>It depends on what they did to conserve the coin. Does NGC place ALL conserved coins in NCS holders? If NGC doesn't place them in NGC holders, I'd think PCGS wouldn't place them in PCGS holders either? >>
NGC doesn't have a security dog.
A truffle sniffing pig?
<< <i>No since there's no way of knowing what chemical NCS used to conserve it. >>
That's what I'm thinking, Broadstruck.
And, remember, folks, the question is on the Secure Plus tier, the tier with the dog...
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<< <i>I mean, just going from that coin sniffer video, that dog sounds like it really bites. Do you think if I tell them in advance these are NCS "conserved" coins, and not "doctored" coins, they'll keep that dog on a leash?
Seriously, would you ever send one of these coins in to Secure Plus? That's really all I'm asking... >>
My take of PCGS`s video of the sniffer was that even if the alert (bark) sounds the coin would then be reviewed...My speculation would be that so long as it`s surfaces aren`t damaged and the quality is all there it would be a go...But that`s at best just a guess and my take of it...
AB
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 cracked an MS64 1939 s walker contaminated with PVC out of a first gen PCGS holder and sent it to NGC for conservation.... they cleaned it up and then proceeded to holder it as a 66 coin. I then cracked it and sent to PCGS, they concurred via a 66 PCGS holder!
That was before the big sniffer dog was born!!
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I was told by one of NGC member dealers that NCS did not use any chemicals and that there methods involved using compressed air
to remove contaminants and organic material from the surface
of a coin?I always questioned that statement due to the color changes I have seen on some of there conserved coins.
Was I sold a bill of goods or have they changed there policy's
and methods???
<< <i>NCS provides a reasonable service and they take care in what they do. If you think the coin might grade then give it a shot. I have had success in the past. >>
Oh, those coins have graded, there's no question about it. But, then, there was no Secure Plus dog around at that time to give them a big bite in the ass.
Teva - Still debating over whether I want to be the guinea pig on this one, so, stay tuned on that. On NCS's use of chemicals, though, ever seen their "Coin[s] of the Month?" I think that's what those were called. They used more than compressed air on those, let me tell you.
<< <i>I cracked an MS64 1939 s walker contaminated with PVC out of a first gen PCGS holder and sent it to NGC for conservation.... they cleaned it up and then proceeded to holder it as a 66 coin. I then cracked it and sent to PCGS, they concurred via a 66 PCGS holder!
That was before the big sniffer dog was born!!
PCGS would have removed it for you...
However, even if a "conserved" coin found its way into a Secure Plus holder, what would it prove?
If the conserving was properly done and left no residue, it should not be kicked out by the new
technology.
<< <i>
<< <i>No since there's no way of knowing what chemical NCS used to conserve it. >>
That's what I'm thinking, Broadstruck.
And, remember, folks, the question is on the Secure Plus tier, the tier with the dog... >>
Are you kidding? Destructive analysis works very simply to provide the answers on this. Send a few cheap coins in to NCS, knowing the problems, and test them afterwards.
Some of what they did sucked, but it's old news. A few of their curation/conservation processes were discussed and detailed with web links to a paper from some chemist at U of Pittsburgh. Dr. Donald Knaack, research chemist for DuPont and coin devotee, has been contributing and advising others for years and years.
On another and more important point. PCGS has an absolute right to sniff anything and reject anything for whatever reason they might choose. It would defeat the idea of the sniffer to reveal what it was programmed to detect. And my guess is that, over time, it will get smarter.
<< <i>Are you kidding? Destructive analysis pure dead simple
Yeah, I think you guys talked me out of it. It'd be like teasing a rabid dog.