My coin was dipped.....What do I do now??

Well I bought this coin for my collection a year ago on Heritage.
When I went to the safe-deposit box Friday to get some coins
for reholder, I noticed that one of my coins now has white spots all
over the coin. I have not looked at the coin in some time but I know that
it didn't have the spots when I bought the coin!!
What do I do now??
Coin in question 1970 No-S PCGS PR68 Cameo

When I went to the safe-deposit box Friday to get some coins
for reholder, I noticed that one of my coins now has white spots all
over the coin. I have not looked at the coin in some time but I know that
it didn't have the spots when I bought the coin!!
What do I do now??
Coin in question 1970 No-S PCGS PR68 Cameo


Jaime
~Proof Roosevelt Hoarder~ My Roosevelt Set

0
Comments
Had it been a common dime no biggie but this No S isn't common by any means.
The name is LEE!
<< <i>grade review and have PCGS dip it again >>
Why in the world would I want it dipped again!!
There is no reason this coin should have ever been dipped in the first place.
<< <i>By all means, submit it to PCGS for grade review.
Had it been a common dime no biggie but this No S isn't common by any means. >>
That is the whole reason I am so upset!! This ain't no $50 coin!!
<< <i>
<< <i>grade review and have PCGS dip it again >>
Why in the world would I want it dipped again!!
There is no reason this coin should have ever been dipped in the first place. >>
You don't know why it might have been dipped or that it should never have been dipped.
Consider the work that PCGS does to save it "conservation". Then forget about it.
Lance.
I have had the same issue in the past and PCGS is very fair to work with. In the end, they treated me so well I have over 95% of my coins in PCGS slabs. They stand behind their product.
“In matters of style, swim with the current; in matters of principle, stand like a rock." - Thomas Jefferson
My digital cameo album 1950-64 Cameos - take a look!
<< <i>
<< <i>grade review and have PCGS dip it again >>
Why in the world would I want it dipped again!!
There is no reason this coin should have ever been dipped in the first place. >>
I would prefer dipping this coin to leaving the potentially more damaging spots on it. PCGS has an excellent guarantee- let them solve the problem for you.
Nothing to think about, just do it.
I have an 1938-D Buffalo MS67 (Obviously not in the same class as your no P dime) that had grown a real ugly white splotch on it and it was conserved by PCGS at no cost to me. They will stand behind it!
George
My War Nickels https://www.pcgs.com/setregistry/nickels/jefferson-nickels-specialty-sets/jefferson-nickels-fs-basic-war-set-circulation-strikes-1942-1945/publishedset/94452
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Just a tought....I would send it to PCGS under GRADE GUARANTEE or SPOT REVIEW.
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<< <i>And, I agree, the coin does not look CAMEO at all. Maybe it is just your images. But, if it is designated as a CAMEO, I would send it in for both, spot review and designation review. >>
Maybe the milk spots ARE the Cameo?
No Way Out: Stimulus and Money Printing Are the Only Path Left
<< <i>Chances are it was never dipped. Also, the newly formed spots cannot be "dipped" off. PCGS compensation is your only recourse. >>
Okay so how do spot just form after the coin was minted 30 years ago.
Last year no spots and this year spots??? I am sorry but I still think it was dipped!!
<< <i>
<< <i>Chances are it was never dipped. Also, the newly formed spots cannot be "dipped" off. PCGS compensation is your only recourse. >>
Okay so how do spot just form after the coin was minted 30 years ago.
Last year no spots and this year spots??? I am sorry but I still think it was dipped!! >>
I agree with you and a lot of valuable coins a freshened "Just cause" before being submitted with the hope of a higher grade.
<< <i>Doesn't look like a cameo at all.Are you sure it was designated as a cameo? >>
Here is the pictures of the slab from Heritage? No the best cameo coin!!
2. Slabs are potential moisture traps.
3. SDBs are high humidity environments which are not designed for optimal metals storage.
4. Only the "sniffer" could tell the Source of the Spot.
<< <i>Just curious whats that coin worth nowadays? >>
PCGS says $1200 but really they go between $900 and $1100 in auction.
No Way Out: Stimulus and Money Printing Are the Only Path Left
<< <i>1. Condensation!
2. Slabs are potential moisture traps.
3. SDBs are high humidity environments which are not designed for optimal metals storage.
4. Only the "sniffer" could tell the Source of the Spot.
I have had 4 safe deposit boxes for 3 years with over 150 slabbed Roosevelt in them and this is the only coin to develop spots!!
<< <i>
<< <i>1. Condensation!
2. Slabs are potential moisture traps.
3. SDBs are high humidity environments which are not designed for optimal metals storage.
4. Only the "sniffer" could tell the Source of the Spot.
I have had 4 safe deposit boxes for 3 years with over 150 slabbed Roosevelt in them and this is the only coin to develop spots!! >>
Well, let PCGS investigate via Heritage, and take care of it. Maybe the consignor is one of the infamous 'coin doctors'.
<< <i>The "milk spot" issue is a common problem with modern US Mint silver. It especially appears on silver eagles removed right from a fresh mint tube. If the spotting was due to dipping after coins left the mint it would not be so common on coins that are known not to have been post-mint dipped such as the silver eagles coming out of mint tubes for the first time. It is not just a US Mint problem; Canadian silver maples have even more spotting problems. For some unknown reason the spotting does not surface immediately. I'm very surprised that your coin took 30 years to develop spotting and the fact that it occurred on a proof is more surprising. Maybe the fact that it is a proof has something to do with long delay in surfacing. >>
In you thread you keep referring to silver. The 1970 Proof Roosevelt are .750 copper, .250 nickel.......no silver so does your statement still hold any weight to clad coins.
<< <i>Okay one more question......Don't I have to be a member at PCGS to submit it for spot review? >>
If you're not a member, another member or an authorized dealer can submit the coin for you.
Edited to add: PCGS may see this as a mechanical error. It's obvious it's not a cameo.
IMHO when you look at the close-ups you can see that the devices aren't smooth, and do indeed have the frost there. I'd guess it's got more cameo there than the pictures would lead us to believe.
<< <i>
<< <i>Okay one more question......Don't I have to be a member at PCGS to submit it for spot review? >>
If you're not a member, another member or an authorized dealer can submit the coin for you. >>
You can submit coins for spot review without being a member. If you don't have a submission form you can contact customer service and ask them to mail it to you. You have to pay the shipping both ways plus the $8 handling fee. If PCGS can't remove the spots and the coin downgrades, they will contact you in regards to their buyback offer.
<< <i>
<< <i>
<< <i>Okay one more question......Don't I have to be a member at PCGS to submit it for spot review? >>
If you're not a member, another member or an authorized dealer can submit the coin for you. >>
You can submit coins for spot review without being a member. If you don't have a submission form you can contact customer service and ask them to mail it to you. You have to pay the shipping both ways plus the $8 handling fee. If PCGS can't remove the spots and the coin downgrades, they will contact you in regards to their buyback offer. >>
When I spoke with them today, they said they waive the $8 handling fee.
<< <i>
<< <i>
<< <i>
<< <i>Okay one more question......Don't I have to be a member at PCGS to submit it for spot review? >>
If you're not a member, another member or an authorized dealer can submit the coin for you. >>
You can submit coins for spot review without being a member. If you don't have a submission form you can contact customer service and ask them to mail it to you. You have to pay the shipping both ways plus the $8 handling fee. If PCGS can't remove the spots and the coin downgrades, they will contact you in regards to their buyback offer. >>
When I spoke with them today, they said they waive the $8 handling fee. >>
That may be the case then. I know in the past, on any free service there was no handling fee. Recently they began charging the handling fee for collector club grading vouchers and quarterly specials.
to me it looks like it was artificially frosted and that has gone bad - rather than dip residue
When it's over be sure to update the thread.
Good luck with it.
<< <i>
<< <i>grade review and have PCGS dip it again >>
Why in the world would I want it dipped again!!
There is no reason this coin should have ever been dipped in the first place. >>
What causes you to believe that it has already been dipped at least once?
will be gone. Ironically, had the coin been dipped BEFORE encapsulation, there would likely never have been a problem