| Author |
Replies: 4 / Views: 1,377 |
|
|
Valued Member
United States
79 Posts |
|
|
|
|
Rest in Peace
United States
2684 Posts |
Hi Alice-- It's kinda hard to tell which parts of the coins belong to which coin, but if I got it right, the pics should be read from top to bottom, yes? So, from the top, it's 1878CC followed by two 1878's. The 78CC Morgan is easily the most potentially valuable of the three, but it looks like it has been cleaned. The second 78 (reverse of 78 with parallel arrow feathers) looks like it's in the best condition with XF or AU features, but through the plastic, it's also possible it's been spiffed up a little. The third 78 is the original 8 tail feathers variety, but is in only VF condition. The CC is definitely worth slabbing, but do it at ANACS so you'll at least get it into an encapsulation instead of a "sorry, can't grade it" bodybag. The two 1878s are both just marginally worth it to get slabbed with market value at roughly $40 each (maximum) AFTER slabbing, presuming they haven't been cleaned or otherwise altered. If it were me, I'd have the CC slabbed no matter what its condition. I'd have to make a personal assessment of the other two before sending them in to make sure they weren't problem coins. If I had convinced myself they weren't cleaned I'd probably send them both in even though I probably wouldn't recover the full value of the coin plus the cost to grade and slab them (e.g., I'd spend $25 to slab a $40 coin if the coin had cost me little or nothing and be happy if it brought in $25.). One thing to remember is that a slabbed coin will sell a LOT more easily than a raw coin and will almost always bring more than a raw coin. Re-reading the above, it may not make linear sense since I was mentally jumping back and forth over the pro's and con's of slabbing the second two. ANACS would be my grading company of choice since it costs the least to grade and slab, but I would submit them at the lowest possible submission tier which is $12 per coin at the Economy rate (21 days which means you might get them back by Labor Day). I think the most you could get for either of the 1878 coins in a slab on ebay would be about $25 to $30 (nobody gets Book Value on relatively common coins), so you'd be ahead, but not by very much especially when postage/shipping/packaging costs are factored in. Let me know if this makes sense.  Even if it were run over by a locomotive, you'd have no problem selling the 78CC.  Fred
|
|
Valued Member
 United States
79 Posts |
Oh thanks Fred. You make perfect sense, and yes, you were reading them down the right way. I did take the pics without the plastic covers over the coins. They are sort of weird shiny, maybe I pushed a button on the camera by accident. Uncle says they didn't clean any of them, they knew better because it was in the coin book they had way back in the 50's. I have another set of coins, I'm putting here shortly, and changed where I was taking the pics so maybe they'll look better. Thank you so much for your ideas on these three!! The CC is going in the box. Think I'll get it back by fall? :) Alice
|
|
Rest in Peace
United States
2684 Posts |
Depends at what level you submit it. The more you pay, the faster they come back. Many collectors submit at the lowest level (Economy) and don't look for their coins back for three to six months. Because I'm a fulltime RVer, I usually have relocation deadlines which don't give me enough time to wait at the post office, so I spend $30 to $50 to get the coins back within a guaranteed period of time. I've got several to go into ANACS, but they'll have to wait until fall when I'll have longer periods in one spot. I haven't yet gone looking at other threads you might have posted. I'm getting ready to relocate in a few days to a cooler climate higher in the Arizona mountains to the north. It's getting ready to break 100F here, too much for me, so I'll be offline for a few days to possibly more than a week or two, depending on whether I find a site where I can access my satellite. Watch for me to just pop in with no advance notice.  Please keep the forum posted on how well you make out. Fred
|
|
Valued Member
United States
411 Posts |
quote: Originally posted by Morgan Fred
<snip> Many collectors submit at the lowest level (Economy) and don't look for their coins back for three to six months. <snip>
Don't forget, at least for NGC and PCGS, there is a limit for coins submitted to the economy level: you've got to have four more coins to submit along with it, and none can be valued over $300. I don't know about Morgan dates except that CC's are very desireable. So I don't know what the real value of this coin is, but if it's more than $300 you have to send it for a higher tier service. Also, about ANACS. Now I know there are some serious ANACS devotees out there and I don't mean offense, but I wouldn't send my coins into ANACS at this time. If you go to the CoinValues website, there is a comparison of the PCGS, NGC, and ANACS as to prices realized for the same coin, same grade. PCGS is first. NGC doesn't do as well, but still good. ANACS doesn't do very well at all.  That's nothing against ANACS. I wish they would command higher prices and maybe, under the new leadership (and with the groovy new holders), ANACS could become the third top-tier TPG's, but IMHO, it's not that now. 
|
| |
Replies: 4 / Views: 1,377 |
|
To participate in the forum you must log in or register.
Disclaimer: While a tremendous amount of effort goes into ensuring the accuracy of the information contained in this site, Coin Community assumes no liability for errors. Copyright 2005 - 2026 Coin Community Family- all rights reserved worldwide. Use of any images or content on this website without prior written permission of Coin Community or the original lender is strictly prohibited.
Contact Us | Advertise Here | Privacy Policy / Terms of Use
|
| Coin Community Forum |
© 2005 - 2026 Coin Community Forums |
| It took 0.2 seconds to rattle this change. |
 |
|