Bought a Trade Dollar yesterday - 99% sure it is real but not 100%

It not a series that I am very familiar with. I was thinking about tacking in on an order I have set to go out.
Oh and I picked up the baby bustie as well







Oh and I picked up the baby bustie as well








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Comments
Eric
"“Those who sacrifice liberty for security/safety deserve neither.“(Benjamin Franklin)
"I only golf on days that end in 'Y'" (DE59)
type2,CCHunter.
keoj
<< <i>27.1 grams 418 grains >>
Seems reasonable, I had a fake that was off considerably. The ultimate would be to do a specific gravity test.
<< <i>
<< <i>27.1 grams 418 grains >>
Seems reasonable, I had a fake that was off considerably. The ultimate would be to do a specific gravity test. >>
Chinese fakers use real silver in their fakes.
<< <i>
<< <i>
<< <i>27.1 grams 418 grains >>
Seems reasonable, I had a fake that was off considerably. The ultimate would be to do a specific gravity test. >>
Chinese fakers use real silver in their fakes. >>
I didn't mean to discount that possibility, but quantitative testing can conclusively weed out certain fakes.
http://macrocoins.com
usually wrong!
Now what is the diameter and thickness?
Should be 1.5 inches and .114 inches thick.
bob
<< <i>Wow, if the counterfeits are so good that there is this much controversy determining if it's real, how would a new collector ever get into this series? How likely is it a TPG T$ is counterfeit, either the coin itself being an excellent fake or the slab itself being counterfeit? Seems the counterfeiters are ruining the hobby, at least where certain series are concerned. Not that I was interested in T$, but this seems a cancer that is spreading through the hobby. >>
Every year the fakes keep pouring out of china and the internet makes the collectors have access to buying them, and unfortunately the counterfeiters are stepping up their game. Good news is that I haven't heard of any passing the top TPG graders without getting noticed.
type2,CCHunter.
I am a dealer in Bust and Seated coins, and I will not buy nor sell an uncertified Trade dollar, unless I am 100% certain of its authenticity. If I have to submit the coin to a grading service to be certain, I do so. Some of the fake Trade dollars are very deceptive.
I have customers who regularly tell me about great coins they bought somewhere in an online auction or a flea market or a local auction, that are in coin series they don't know, and the coin must be authentic because my customer says "It looks good to me." The last two of these coins I was told about were a 1798 dollar that was rejected for authenticity by both PCGS and NGC, and an 1873-CC Trade dollar in AU purchased by the customer for $300 despite the Coin Values valuation of $3,500 in AU and even the Greysheet valuation of $1,175 in AU.
Two points here: 1. Maybe the "it looks good to me" isn't that good of a test of authenticity, particularly for someone who doesn't know the series.
2. If you owned the 1873-CC Trade dollar in AU, would you (a) send it to PCGS, get it authenticated, and sell it for somewhere around $1,175 or more, or (b) sell it raw for $300?
An authorized PCGS dealer, and a contributor to the Red Book.
Complete Set of Chopmarked Trade Dollars
Carson City Silver Dollars Complete 1870-1893http://www.pcgs.com/setregistry/showcase.aspx?sc=2722"
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