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First Page  Showing last 15 replies.
Author Previous TopicReplies: 16 / Views: 2,379Next Topic Page 2 of 2
Pillar of the Community
United States
7197 Posts
 Posted 11/13/2012  1:43 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add muddler to your friends list
It is a wonderful coin but I do not think it is a proof. There are die cracks on the reverse above united and I would doubt a proof die would have been used to a degree of die cracks.
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United States
23522 Posts
 Posted 11/13/2012  2:48 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add SsuperDdave to your friends list

Quote:
It is a wonderful coin but I do not think it is a proof. There are die cracks on the reverse above united and I would doubt a proof die would have been used to a degree of die cracks.


This. Given the vanishingly-small mintage of Proofs that year, it's not possible to believe they'd allow a cracked die to slip through. Still a superb coin, and 63 is probably close.

If you're going to liquidate the 7070, do it individually. A 7070 built to this quality standard is well-worth slabbing and individual sales through the upper-tier auction houses, and at the other end you'll have the wherewithal for some nice gold indeed.
Pillar of the Community
United States
5854 Posts
 Posted 11/13/2012  7:16 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add D0ubl3Eagle to your friends list
I have to agree this is not a proof. MS-63 seems possible but the pictures are a bit too dark for me to grade from. Looks like a very nice coin whatever it grades.
Valued Member
United States
153 Posts
 Posted 11/27/2012  5:41 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add coins4fun to your friends list
Well, PCGS didn't like the coin. It just came back from PCGS AU Details "Smoothed." Sad, thought this coin might be a proof initially.
Pillar of the Community
Mexico
1304 Posts
 Posted 11/27/2012  5:58 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add harrison2 to your friends list
"Smoothed".....what does THAT mean?
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United States
23522 Posts
 Posted 11/27/2012  6:07 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add SsuperDdave to your friends list

Quote:
"Smoothed".....what does THAT mean?


Working the fields with a tool that removes dings. It's the cause of the hairlines on the reverse.
Pillar of the Community
United States
3345 Posts
 Posted 11/27/2012  6:25 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add rachums107 to your friends list
RedBook doesn't even list any proofs (2012). but I dont doubt you guys
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United States
23522 Posts
 Posted 11/27/2012  6:35 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add SsuperDdave to your friends list

Quote:
Redbook doesn't even list any proofs (2012). but I dont doubt you guys


CCF is more accurate than RedBook.

http://www.coincommunity.com/us_qua..._liberty.asp
Valued Member
United States
153 Posts
 Posted 11/27/2012  7:03 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add coins4fun to your friends list
Where is the alledged "smoothing" ? On the reverse, next to United there appears to be a die crack. I don't get why this was given a details grade. Do you think that it's possible another grading service would have graded it much differently?
Pillar of the Community
Mexico
1304 Posts
 Posted 11/27/2012  10:46 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add harrison2 to your friends list
Interesting.

"Smoothing" that's a new one for me! Thanks for the education! :)
Valued Member
United States
386 Posts
 Posted 11/27/2012  10:52 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add sjh241 to your friends list
SuperdDave, could you take that pic of the coin and photoshop it with arrows so we can learn how the fields were worked and how to spot this?
Valued Member
United States
366 Posts
 Posted 11/29/2012  08:37 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Windycity to your friends list
Too bad on grade. It would be nice to see real closeups and sharp images to understand what "smoothing" means. Assume that is form of polishing.
Valued Member
United States
153 Posts
 Posted 01/14/2013  01:28 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add coins4fun to your friends list
So I ended up putting this nice piece in my 7070 album. I looked at it again tonight, under a loupe and it does appear to have deeply reflective surfaces, unlike any other Seated coinage I have owned. I am still thinking that it could be a proof, and given its rarity (all proofs prior to 1858 are extremely rare with mintages unrecorded) that possibility may have been overlooked by the grading service (it was not submitted suggesting that it might have been a proof striking.) I would be curious what some experts on the forum might think about this. I will probably bring the coin with me to a local coin show taking place in my area this week to get some further opinions.
Edited by coins4fun
01/14/2013 01:29 am
Valued Member
United States
168 Posts
 Posted 01/14/2013  01:42 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Tom B to your friends list
I hadn't seen this thread previously, but my first impression of the coin was that it had altered surfaces. I am truly surprised that the folks at Stack's did not tell you that when they looked at the coin.
Pillar of the Community
861 Posts
 Posted 01/14/2013  01:51 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add g048406 to your friends list
I can spot areas of tooling/smoothing on the reverse just left of the eagles neck/under the eagles chin, as well as tooling/smoothing above the eagles head/under the letter "E" in STATES.
The stars look very sharp, I'm surprised it didn't get a UNC details grade. As others have stated, the coin is not a proof as the reverse die crack above the "ED" in UNITED would have taken thousands of strikes with that die before such a failure to occur.
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