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Re: 1916 SLQ on ebay... Thats alot of money on a raw coin.
His auctions state, "7 day return privilege" Maybe the " THIS IS AN ABSOLUTE AUCTION, AND ALL SALES ARE CONSIDERED FINAL" means that a sale is a sale, no reserve, buyback etc. Otherwise, the auction is presumed to be with reserve (3) : _______________________ U.C.C. - ARTICLE 2 - SALES ..PART 3. GENERAL OBLIGATION AND… -
Re: Something I'm thankful for on the best coin forum ever: Please bring back the really good ones!!
I love a good old thread. Revisits a topic, and brings to life dead and banned members. Admit to finding interesting forum members and doing a deep dive on their specialty perusing a history of posts. I find nuggets of information the antiquated search engine cannot. Most people ignore me by design or habit, so my advice… -
Re: I hated to do it - but FELT I had to - situation resolved!
Posting Rules and General Rules of Conduct You agree that you will not use or allow others to use your membership in these Forums to: 1-Post or transmit any Materials, or links to any Materials, which are knowingly false and/or defamatory, libelous, inaccurate, abusive, vulgar, hateful, harassing, obscene, profane,… -
Re: W Quarter Pricing Continues To Be Strong Heading In To 2025
I see two markets for W quarters - average collectors who mostly seem to want nice raw examples and registry collectors chasing slabbed (mostly PCGS) top pops. I see the in-between quarters as a weak market right now. In-between quarters are slabbed mid-MS examples that are more than $25 but don’t help with the registry… -
Re: Do coins lose weight from circulating?
Friction and wear physically remove metal. Consider sandpaper, a good macro-scale source of friction: imagine taking a coin, and a piece of sandpaper, and rubbing that sandpaper back and forth across the coin lots of times. You will end up with a very flattened coin, and a tiny pile of silver shavings that have been… -
Re: Warren Buffet would definitely NOT be a buyer of gold coins
<< <i> << <i> I consider gold an "insurance" on my investment portfolio, much as I have homeowner's insurance on my house. A quick look at history shows that owning gold in hard times can indeed help feed one's family. >> Insurance against what? When was the last time that gold was the primary means to feed ones family?… -
Re: Anyone up for some Roosie Talk? - Thread #1
Nick. I agree with some of what you are saying, but not everything. The 48-d just sold at the right price in my view, especially when you consider a far tougher 48-p is only about a $500-$600 coin in the same grade and so much harder in pop top 68FB. The price was simply a little high in the Guide on the 48-d in ms67+FB.… -
Re: Very Poor Service
The only part I disagree with is that the submitter is responsible incorrect labels. If PSA isn't accountable for this then why do they have QA more than once in the process? If PSA isn't to blame and isn't qualified to catch it then why aren't we all submitting false info in situations where we would benefit like saying… -
Re: Where is Analyst, Greg Reynolds?
A. I very much appreciate attention from members of this forum and the interest expressed in my career. Indeed, I am truly grateful. B. As always, I welcome disagreements and criticism. I become angry when I am personally attacked. In regard to my past experiences on this forum years ago, I sometimes became angry due to… -
Re: on The Chemistry of Silver: Toning, the Thin-Film Interference Phenomenon and Rainbow Colors, Cleani
Here's my contribution. "Imagine the tiny sulfur atoms and compounds falling, tumbling down the surface of a tilted coin underneath them, each one piling atop the others before it like snow falling on your windshield, and as each particle settles on the coin's surface, it bonds to a silver atom, or to the silver compound…
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