My point was that a lot of us old collectors don't play the slab game that started in the 80s. We old timers have a lot of very rare coins like the 1856 FE that are authentic and we don't need them in a slab. You don't see a lot of them posted, as some of us don't want the world to know we have them (for security reasons). We know they're authentic by using all of the same indicators that the
TPG authenticators use. After all, those
TPG folks, hopefully, got a lot of their knowledge & experience by being collectors first. They're kept in safe deposit boxes, safes, or in some cases are in
inherited collections where the owners don't really know what they have, other than the collections that they
inherited are probably worth a lot. Because a coin isn't in a slab does not mean it's a problem coin.
The 1856 FE was not a coin meant for circulation, they were a pattern cent, and they were given to members of congress, dignitaries, friends, etc. They were known at that time to be something special, and most, if not all, were safely put away for that reason. To blindly assume that any that haven't been slabbed are problem coins is really a false assumption to make, IMHO.
Edited by mackwork
04/05/2012 10:12 pm