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Counterfeit Detection: 2012 Australian Year Of The Dragon Silver Dollar

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CCFPress's Avatar
United States
1420 Posts
 Posted 10/13/2024  08:55 am Show Profile   Bookmark this topic Add CCFPress to your friends list Get a Link to this Message Number of Subscribers
NGC - The popularity of lunar coins has grown of late, making the coins an excellent target for counterfeiters.

Lunar coins have become very popular in recent years with coins struck annually to commemorate the Chinese Zodiac, a calendar that assigns a different animal to each year in a 12-year cycle. The first government-issued lunar coin was the Hong Kong, China 1976 Year of the Dragon $1,000 gold piece, and since that time many other countries have introduced lunar coin series.

Chinese and Australian lunar coins are particularly popular, and the 2012 year of the dragon coins was widely anticipated. NGC has graded thousands of these coins, issued in a number of sizes and denominations. Almost immediately, however, we began to receive counterfeits.

Counterfeit-Detection:-2012-Australian-Year-Of-The-Dragon-Silver-Dollar
Counterfeit Australia 2012 Year of the Dragon Silver Dollar

One example is the 2012 Australian Year of the Dragon Dollar. Although genuine examples are not rare or particularly valuable, this issue has still been targeted by counterfeiters. The major issue with this fake is the lack of detail in the design elements. In addition, the letters around the portrait of Queen Elizabeth II are malformed and have a pimpled appearance. The overall appearance differs significantly from the sharply struck genuine examples.

These fakes are not particularly deceptive, but a one-ounce 2012 silver dollar is not something that would normally set off a red flag or require close inspection. Although someone familiar with the legitimate coins would not be fooled, this is a coin that could easily be overlooked.

Check out Year of the Dragon coins on ebay.

Read More: Counterfeit Detection Series

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Pertinax's Avatar
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2133 Posts
 Posted 10/14/2024  06:33 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Pertinax to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
It's useful to know that there are counterfeits.

However, never having seen one before, I don't understand what you mean by pimpled letters - they look normal to me.

Could you show the difference with close-ups of the letters and the the lack of detail in the design elements on a counterfeit and a genuine specimen, please ?
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