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Replies: 16 / Views: 3,471 |
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
1528 Posts |
um... have to check mine when I get home... at least you don't get milk spots on her face .. sigh
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1200 Posts |
Silver Maples are famous for being the uncontested world-leading silver bullion coin when it comes to milk spots, transit damage and deficient quality control, but... It sounds like you've got an unusually bad batch! RCM policy toward milk spots and damaged Maples is "Yeah--So what's your point?" but it sounds like the ones you got are truly over the top--even for the RCM. If I received what you're describing, I'd be on the phone to the vendor the same day I got them and I'd be returning them the next day. I'm tolerant of milk spots, scratching, marring and non-catastropic rim dings on Maples, but missing body parts on the Queen is just ridiculous--even for Maples! SHAME on the RCM!
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
3692 Posts |
Looks like she has some fuzz above her lip. At least the RCM is keen on realism!
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
2805 Posts |
No, it's just the Chris Hadfield mania claiming yet another victim.
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New Member
 United States
9 Posts |
Thanks for the info. I suspect that the dies must have been pretty worn or something. Looks like a moustache! Basically, wanted for bullion, so no real worries, but was somewhat surprised by the poor quality. I think I will stick with ASE's from here on out. that said, I did get a couple panda's which were really beautiful. Thanks to all again.
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
746 Posts |
Because you have a whole tube of them, wouldn't they be good to keep as "error" coins? Might be worth more? Hmmm... queen with moustache...nice touch... there is a devil's face, so what the heck?... 
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New Member
 United States
9 Posts |
Here is a little better pic of the queen's cookie duster! 
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Valued Member
Canada
258 Posts |
Looks like she has a toothbrush 'stash. Maybe that should be called the "Adolf" variation! I checked my 2013s and don't have any mustachio'ed queens. I agree, keep them as an error variety or something. I't's not like bullion coins are numismatics anyways.
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New Member
United States
5 Posts |
I've bought 4 in the last couple weeks for the LCS, and they are all fine. Maybe she shaved before they stamped her face that day? 
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1037 Posts |
I went through my roll of CML's and the Queen is not darning a mustache. Yours could be part of a run with worn or altered die.
In my roll, the Queen does have acne.
I conclude that the .9999 purity of these the coins is soft enough that it gives the Queen acne from the maple leaf impression it is stacked with.
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New Member
United States
5 Posts |
Bought a couple more maples and this time before I paid I inspected her lip on each coin, everything looked kosher, except the guy behind the counter gave me a funny look.
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Valued Member
Canada
95 Posts |
I'll be going to my LCS to try and get myself some of the one's you got.
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Valued Member
Canada
95 Posts |
I'll be going to my LCS to try and get myself some of the one's you got.
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New Member
United States
23 Posts |
That fuzz makes her look cuter.
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New Member
 United States
9 Posts |
I have to wonder at what point the guy working the press (or whatever they call the machine that stamps these coins out) says to his boss, Hey, I think we got a problem here. Does the boss just let them go to make the daily run quota? Or maybe there is a budgetary driven philosophy of each set of dies runs 40K coins before it is pulled out of service, as long as they are still round, we don't care what they look like! Then I wonder what the last coin looked like from the set of dies that made the ones I got, did the Queen have a beard as well as the moustache? Scary thoughts from a Quality Control perspective. Then also, what makes a coin an error? You take something that has the double die impressions which are obvious errors, then take the Queen with a moustache, is that just poor quality or truly an error. I know that the Coin World must have guidelines for this kind of thing and I'm just too new at it to know what it is. At what point does a coin become an error. From a coin nubie, if you asked me to define an error, I would define it as something produced not as intended, but even that would be very subjective and could be strictly interpreted to fit anything but a perfect coin. Guess I have some research to do! At least I find my "moustached Queens" kind of funny, so I think I'll keep ‘em just because of that!
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Replies: 16 / Views: 3,471 |
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