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Replies: 23 / Views: 2,076 |
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Valued Member
United States
388 Posts |
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Bedrock of the Community
 United States
74481 Posts |
Thank you Mojojojo! I got it for a good price.
Errers and Varietys.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
7194 Posts |
I have lapsed my Bullion ASE for the past two years. The 1986 to 2021 album is full and too heavy to add a new page. I wonder if Dansco has made a type 2 ASE album? Congratulations on your purchase.
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Bedrock of the Community
 United States
74481 Posts |
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1235 Posts |
Just saw this post. It's being referred to as a P mint, but it's not graded, so no inferred mint mark even. Why is it being called a P?
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Valued Member
United States
388 Posts |
I believe the West Point mint produced the Bullion ASEs for 2023
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1235 Posts |
I believe you're right. Certainly no way to tell on a raw coin. I did a search and not seeing any where it's even being specified. Possibly the OP believes no mint mark means it's a Philly?
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Bedrock of the Community
 United States
74481 Posts |
Gilly, I just assumed it was. I am not that knowledgeable on ASE's.
Errers and Varietys.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1235 Posts |
Sounds good. The bullion ASE have no mint mark. Production facilities do vary. The mint is usually forthcoming enough so you know generally where they were minted or where they "could have been" minted. But the only real way to know is by the "monster box" that the bullion comes in, generally I think there is info on the nylon strapping around the box. Once the box is open and the bullion sold, there isn't a way to go back and verify the origin. The third party graders will give an implied mint mint mark on the label if they receive an entire unopened monster box. In certain years there can be multiple mints producing them, and certain implied mint marks are relatively scarce. This especially was true when the pandemic was at its worst and a mint would be closed and another mint would produce them for awhile. They will have the "emergency production" on the label, which to me is a little overly dramatic that there is somehow a danger to society if silver bullion is halted #128580;. No Denver production of any ASE product as of yet, but bullion has been produced at the other 3 mints. Any of the other ASE products will have the mm on the reverse, Proof or Uncirculated aka "burnished".
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Bedrock of the Community
 United States
74481 Posts |
Thank you for the info. Good read.
Errers and Varietys.
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Bedrock of the Community
 United States
26181 Posts |
I just came across this thread. That's a nice looking ASE, Errers and Varietys.
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Bedrock of the Community
 United States
74481 Posts |
Thank you GLB49! Hopefully I can buy another ASE next month.
Errers and Varietys.
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New Member
United States
6 Posts |
2023 P ? Looks like 2023 W West Point Mint 
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1235 Posts |
Quote: 2023 P ? Looks like 2023 W West Point Mint We've talked about this the last few posts. You can't tell where bullion was minted with just a raw coin in hand at all. The graders can get the whole box and know where they came from and grade them as such. But again with a raw individual coin, there is no way to know.
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
7174 Posts |
 Quote: 2023 P ? Looks like 2023 W West Point Mint That's the designers int on the obverse.
Edited by Cujohn 02/14/2024 5:38 pm
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