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Replies: 1,581 / Views: 148,826 |
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New Member
United States
37 Posts |
I have many questions here since I've never had to encapsulate a coin. 1. On the Service Group, Should I pick US standard or Us gold shield? 2. On the Genuine Service, should I pick the genuine with detail or without? 3. On the Service Level and Coin details, don't know what to pick here.... Any help is appreciated!
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Pillar of the Community
United States
587 Posts |
Quote: Surprised no shipped emails yet Go back a few pages and you'll see people reporting shipping confirmation. Like mine, which I received Thursday night.
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Bedrock of the Community
13014 Posts |
Quote: I have many questions here since I've never had to encapsulate a coin. The first question is do you want the COA graded as well which will also put the cert number on the label? Quote: 1. On the Service Group, Should I pick US standard or Us gold shield? You can use either one. The Gold Shield is 5 dollars more a coin and gets you the TrueView picture of the coin Quote:
2. On the Genuine Service, should I pick the genuine with detail or without?
Most people do with, it shouldnt be an issue for this eagle Quote: 3. On the Service Level and Coin details, don't know what to pick here.... If you want the COA graded as well this will be different, but you can use a couple different ones here. You can do modern and value the coin at $300, but if on the once in a blue moon chance something happened to it your compensation would be limited to $300 dollars. or You can use regular and value it at like the $800 some sold for. or If you wanted it done quicker you could do the upgrade and use express
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Valued Member
United States
354 Posts |
can someone walk me through the COA dual encapsulation tier? how would I mark it on the submission form?
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Bedrock of the Community
13014 Posts |
Quote: can someone walk me through the COA dual encapsulation tier? how would I mark it on the submission form? https://www.PCGS.com/news/PCGS-anno...sulation-coaThe big thing is you have to ship them the unopened box from the mint. You use the other tier and "Reverse Proof COA" as the tier. I usually write a note on the sheet too to make sure after all the coins are listed
Edited by basebal21 11/16/2019 3:13 pm
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
1667 Posts |
Jouett, you're welcome! Really glad to hear you gave it that 2nd shot and it worked out for you to get one of these. To be fair, I got that tip about 7:30AM and the mint from people here on this forum (they know who they are ;D ) and have tried it in the past and knew if they have extras they'd do it then each day until they sell out completely, although each day it's gonna get harder and harder because they will have fewer and fewer left to sell.
I can't take all the credit for it, I just put it out there and hammered it home a couple times hoping people would give it a shot and more people from this forum would get some of the remainders and not so many disappointed people on here.
Really happy for you and they others that were able to snag one on Friday morning!
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
10982 Posts |
Mine shipped today and is scheduled for delivery 11/22.
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New Member
United States
37 Posts |
Question to the most seasoned coin collectors here: Knowing that this coin can be considered as a "rare" coin due to the limited mintage... 1.Can it actually be considered rare? 2. Value is driven by speculation first but the mintage amount also adds to that value. So based on this, the coin is reselling at a range between $500-$2000, depending if its certified or not and whats the PR (69,70). Now, there are some coin collectors that say that after the hype, the coin value will actually decrease which I tend to think otherwise. 3. Could the value of the coin reach to similar heights as the 1995 W proof or not?
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Bedrock of the Community
13014 Posts |
Quote: 1.Can it actually be considered rare? In the truest sense no, but in terms of the ASE series it is the lowest mintage by far overall. Quote: 3. Could the value of the coin reach to similar heights as the 1995 W proof or not? Could it yes, I don't see it though. The real big value is for the 70s for the 95. There will be many more 70s on this than the 95. Back then most of the coins had to survive a decade or more before grading as grading ASEs wasn't popular, now many will go straight to the TPGs. The quality of production also wasn't as good then. That said the value for 70's could rise with poor grading but while a value could it's unlikely the next 95-W. It's unlikely this will be less than a few hundred though as a base.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
7293 Posts |
Basebal and I usually don't agree but I agree with what he said.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1044 Posts |
Quote:To those here, in the know, About how many ASE'S are struck per die.? Thanks. Let me be more precise, Making 30,000 of these coins, I am wondering if the Mint used more then say 2 sets of dies, if that? I am thinking that if they did use one set, the result may be the tail end of the lot would NOT be as crisp as the first half. Looking to see, answers of those "in the know", and their thoughts, Thanks I'm re-posting Morgan's dads question with the hope someone will be able to answer it? Very legitimate question which I'm also curious about. I recall reading how often the mint changes out dyes on another thread some time ago so I'm sure there are some here that know.
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Valued Member
United States
171 Posts |
Just tried checking the US Mint site again at 7:30 ET, looks like it's all over...
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
1667 Posts |
I don't have an answer to how many coins are struck per die pair for proof coins. Generally speaking they use a die pair until the coins are unacceptable then they refinish the die or replace it.
With proof dies they don't refinish it that I'm aware of if something happens and the coins become unacceptable. It's replaced.
Also I'm not sure how many die pairs they start with (how many presses they used to make them) at San Francisco.
Difficult question to answer really. I'd think San Francisco could use more than one proof die pair at a time to strike coins. I'd think this question could only be answered by the San Francisco mint as it relates specifically to this coin striking. I'd think they couldn't do all 30K from one die pair alone, but if they use 1, 2, 5,10, or all 20 presses to pound out this edition is what's unknown.
They have the secured die room, I'd think a FOIA request with the right questions might result in some answers. Like how many die pairs they inventoried for the 2019S ERP silver eagle, how long they struck them, I dunno. I don't think they would assign it to one machine to do all 30K because it would take a while.
Since all dies are made at Philadelphia maybe the answer is there on how many dies they made for Sanfrancisco... but I'm not sure if the die finishing happens at philadelphia or sanfrancisco, because if it happens at San Francisco then they just got SAE dies to strike whatever and finishing was done at San fran.
Difficult question. It's proofs though, much higher quality control I don't think there will be any die pair issues regardless of how many pairs they used. Proofs rarely had a problem.
Edited by Big-Kingdom 11/17/2019 09:04 am
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Bedrock of the Community
 United States
12854 Posts |
Mine is still "processing"... 
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1280 Posts |
got my shipping email this morning but tracking number doesn't work yet
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Replies: 1,581 / Views: 148,826 |