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Replies: 29 / Views: 2,733 |
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Valued Member
 China
79 Posts |
haha, thanks to everyone here.
I'd really like to communicate with these frank fellas.
Edited by Alf_coin 10/31/2007 11:09 pm
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Valued Member
 China
79 Posts |
quote:
And to note the severity of counterfeited coins, I got a damaged counterfeited die for under 30USD. Obviously sellers nowadays don't do this because they don't want to get caught with the evidence that they are producing such.
Well£¬in China, many handcraft factories tend to regard counterfeiting non-PRC coins, including foreign and ancient Chinese coins, as a common industry of craftworks. And their activities risk no any conflict with the law.
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Valued Member
 China
79 Posts |
What's more, it's extremely boring that when you get a fake coin at high cost, few people show any pity. On the contrary, most of them tend to say: "Oh, fool! Why don't you be able to tell the difference between fake and genuine? "
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Valued Member
 China
79 Posts |
You must pay much more attention to differentiate any one coin, even though a small worthless coin
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Moderator
 United States
23731 Posts |
It's hard to say if this coin is genuine or not, there are some details that indicate to me that it may not be. On the obverse the uneven wear on the right is a little odd along the the extra piece of metal on the top of the letter L. On the reverse The letter A is different for the A's on the obverse. The cross bar is Vee shaped rather than straight. In the examples in Krause and on coin archives all letters are the same. The actual weight would help to tell better.
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Valued Member
 China
79 Posts |
quote:
The actual weight would help to tell better.
But sorry, I can't get the actual weight because I have only some pictures of it. The current owner of this coin want to sell it at about USD240 Apparently the seller has overvalued it, even though it's genuine.
Edited by Alf_coin 11/01/2007 01:43 am
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Pillar of the Community
Australia
3831 Posts |
The thing about China is, they will even counterfeit 1 yuan, which is a mere 12 US cents when I last checked the currency rate. Anything else is just an instant profit. Good grief, if 12 cents is worth counterfeiting, what else isn't, other than perhaps 1 cent?
Edited by gxseries 11/01/2007 03:09 am
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Moderator
 United States
23731 Posts |
Well if you are satified that it's genuine go for it. Though the acking price is high for a coin the I would grade as VG/F.
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Valued Member
United States
136 Posts |
Agreed; you guys are fantastic. Very knowledgable. One question. Can you get into legal trouble for owning a die like that? I think though as a collector, that's something really cool to own because it's a part of coinage history.
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Pillar of the Community
Australia
3831 Posts |
This? I suppose it's illegal if you are trying to strike counterfeits otherwise it's "ok"? 
My partial coin collection http://www.omnicoin.com/collection/gxseriesMy numismatics articles and collection: http://www.gxseries.com/numis/numis_index.htmRegularly updated at least once a month.
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Valued Member
United States
136 Posts |
I guess it may be like owning rolling papers or a bong and people think you are smoking pot? So I see what you are saying. It's a cool thing I think. Man, I gotta get off here; as I was looking around at some info, it just raised more and more questions (now I am wondering about mint marks like o, L, VDB and all that... too much to digest!)
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1840 Posts |
quote: But as you know, the coin has a very special rim it's hard to fake technically.
I wouldn't use 250 year-old technology as the determinant factor in the authenticity of a coin. Some of the Chinese forgeries are very sophisticated. quote: listed in Krause as C# 8. VG-$40.00, F-$80.00, VF-$100
echizento - I think your pricing might be for C #8a, not C #8, which I believe this coin is. Pricing for that coin would be VG-$60 F-$120 & VF-$250.
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Valued Member
United States
136 Posts |
Hi again,
What do you weigh coins on? Is there a special scale or can you use say a postage scale or weight watchers type scale (food scale)?
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Moderator
 Australia
16849 Posts |
You can weigh coins on anything, provided it's reasonably accurate - weight to the nearest 0.1 grams is adequate, though 0.01 grams is better. I've seen cheap, reliable, portable 0.01 gram balances for sale around the place. I've got a 0.0001 gram balance in the lab at work, which is definitely overkill for authenticating a coin.
Don't say "infinitely" when you mean "very"; otherwise, you'll have no word left when you want to talk about something really infinite. - C. S. Lewis
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Valued Member
United States
136 Posts |
Very nice to know. Thanks. Yeah, I don't think I'll go overkill; this won't be my main hobby, but I do want to educate myself. I am a autograph collector so I already have a pretty accurate postal scale (sometimes, the post office and I have different readings but most of the time it's the same). The postage scale does .1 grams so I guess I am ok. I was just thinking to use it if something might be fake or something.
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