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Is This Coin Genuine? 1800 MO Fm

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 Posted 10/18/2018  01:54 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add swamperbob to your friends list
Dorado The 1806 is the correct design and at this resolution shows none of the characteristics that told me the coin was a fake (numismatic forgery).

That said I would like to see clearer pictures including the edge of the coin.

Quite often it is the edge that allows a conclusive diagnosis.

Another thing to keep in mind, there are no silver copies of Potosi coins made for circulation in the late 1800s after die transfer techniques were developed. The counterfeits of Potosi coins tend to be early and crude. The Numismatic forgeries are less common but typical of the type.

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 Posted 10/18/2018  02:25 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Squire Wilson to your friends list
Here are some of my ideas

To me the central three "fleur de lis" do not look quite right. The top left hand side "fleur" looks skew, poorly rendered and different from the rest.

The small design within the window below the fleur de lis and between the lion (LHS) and the castle (RHS) is very poorly rendered.

On the reverse the dots punctuating the text are very close (too close) to the base of the pillars and I think the dot in the 240 degree position on the reverse is in the wrong location.

The varying lengths of the dendricles around the rim of the coin also make me suspicious

Squire
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 Posted 10/18/2018  04:15 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jgenn to your friends list
swamperbob, that rectangle to the left of and slightly overlapped by the correct window was what I was calling the 'extra' window.

Is-This-Coin-Genuine?---1800-MO-Fm
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 Posted 10/18/2018  2:55 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add realeswatcher to your friends list
I buy all my 8R from Darek Schmok (did I spell that right?). Smuck? Schmk?


Quote:
The fact that the seller put all six up at once says to me that he is not aware of the forgery. He was likely a victim.

He's put them up periodically for YEARS now, Bob...
Edited by realeswatcher
10/18/2018 3:17 pm
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 Posted 10/18/2018  3:46 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add swamperbob to your friends list
realeswatcher Interesting comment. The fact that he has done this before places it in a much different light. So he is incredibly arrogant and relies on the ignorance of the average buyer to distribute his fakes.

This is the type of seller that we used to suspend. That at least would force him to open a new account with a new bank account and address. Today as I understand it he would only have these 9 items cancelled and ebay would allow him to keep selling crap.

It really proves the value of forums where Bad Sellers can be identified and avoided. It also proves how critical it is to know the signs of forgery seen on these cheaply made fakes.
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 Posted 10/18/2018  5:29 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add realeswatcher to your friends list
Depending on the volume of past reports/complaints, it would be a hard sell to suspend/kill his account when he has 1000 items up, only 60 coins, and it's a question of 9 coins - but ALL just ONE type. He could plausibly plead ignorance, say he bought a large group years ago, whatever...

Have seen so many now from him to know that's not the case... but the person at ebay handling such things hasn't.

Quote:
It also proves how critical it is to know the signs of forgery...

THIS is the important part... Fakes are more and more and better and better, but there is also SO much information available online now for the smart collector to educate himself with.

You see PLENTY of these types now mixed in with "good" inventory from non-specialist sellers who don't know any better... You can't bang EVERYONE that sells 1 or 2 - that list would grow and grow.

Tying those points together, the best, most impactful thing to do is keep posting about it. Trying to convince each individual (innocent) seller each and every time is too labor intensive for the effect it possibly may - MAY - bring about. They obviously don't know any better, otherwise they would have noticed it to begin with. So, you then have to go through the effort explaining EVERYTHING to them... and most don't want to hear it.

Not worth it, really, unless you have quick, visual proof. So, you won't save the ones who get burned on THAT piece, but by posting and spreading the word you WILL teach the people who understand the need to be a savvy buyer (i.e., those who educate themselves, read forums, attend shows, etc.).
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 Posted 10/18/2018  10:09 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add swamperbob to your friends list
I wrote to the seller and "Barbara" replied very quickly claiming that they know nothing about coins. So I gave "her" two examples of proof in picture form. Then I suggested they get my book to see the same error on an example of the coin I have examined and tested.

I will see what happens as a result.
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 Posted 10/18/2018  10:52 pm  Show Profile   Check nss-52's eBay Listings Bookmark this reply Add nss-52 to your friends list

Quote:
Each coin was identical in all details


Only one has the "extra window".
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 Posted 10/18/2018  11:08 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add swamperbob to your friends list
Squire Wilson You made a comment that needs just a bit of discussion to eliminate some apparent incorrect beliefs.

You say:
Quote:
To me the central three "fleur de lis" do not look quite right. The top left hand side "fleur" looks skew, poorly rendered and different from the rest.

The small design within the window below the fleur de lis and between the lion (LHS) and the castle (RHS) is very poorly rendered.

On the reverse the dots punctuating the text are very close (too close) to the base of the pillars and I think the dot in the 240 degree position on the reverse is in the wrong location.

The varying lengths of the dendricles around the rim of the coin also make me suspicious


First I presume the comments refer to the 1800 Mexico City coin that I posted. This is critical because there is standard variation mint to mint.

Are you aware that each working die made in the colonial Spanish mints was individually made using a series of impressions made from elemental punches that were copied from a master punch made from a Matrix Block?

This Matrix Block was made in Spain and shipped to specific mints. The blocks were NOT IDENTICAL mint to mint. This makes it possible to identify 8Rs without visible mint marks.

So for example the three Fleur-de-Lis appeared on ONE punch and the spacing and orientation of the individual fleurs is different for each colonial mint. The Mexico City punches were made from a master die block which has the upper left fleur tilted to the right (final coin view). The 1800 Mo FM coin in fact uses the correct orientation and tilt for Mexico City. (The forgery was copied from a genuine coin.) Regarding the "poor" appearance of the fleur - that is rather typical and can be blamed on two things. First the punches used to make working dies were used many times and they did wear. The edges of the 3 fleur punch can lose sharpness due to away or chipping - but the internal spacing of the three fleurs is constant. If one fleur shifts location or orientation all three do as well. Small variations in appearance can also be attributed to die wear and chipping of the working die. Finally variations in appearance can and do occur because of wear and damage to the individual coin itself. When looking at these coins always try to eliminate wear and chipping evidence as you go long.

An extremely critical factor that you need to understand is which elements were found on EACH punch. I have studied thousands of examples of 8 reales just to identify these patterns. They do form a solid database which can be assembled from genuine examples of high grade coins.

Your second comment refers to the design below the fleurs and between the Lion and Castle. This is the representation of a pomegranate. Each of these features is a symbol found in the heraldic shield of Spain. The pomegranate is a feature that was punched into the die individually. So position inside the "window" can and does vary die to die. This is one feature which was virtually identical mint to mint (at least as far as I can ascertain at this time). Once again some variation in appearance can be attributed to punch, die or coin wear (or a combination of all three). I do not believe that there was an intentional variation in design. So for the 1800 I view any difference in appearance to damage to the punch element, die or coin.

The dots (stops) that divide the text were made with individual punches so spacing does vary and is a very useful way to distinguish between individual dies. The size of these stops vary so it is my belief that the stop punch was individually crafted in the mint and not created from the matrix block in all cases. Punch, die and coin wear again contribute to differences in appearance.

The final comment refers to denticles that form the border of the coin on both sides. Dentils are found on the matrix block iteself and they consist of a series of several lozenge shaped dentils in an arc. These short arc segments are punched in sequentially to create a circle. At pints where the arc seqments join/overlap there can be small errors in spacing that are EXTREMELY useful in identifying individual dies. That can be done for each of the 6 1800 coins to prove that they were all copied from one original. So how should you look at individual coins? There are a few "musts" that take place as a result.

1. The dentils were complete on the actual die and the diameter (outer edge to outer edge) of the die was larger than the size of the planchet. That means unless a strike is severely eccentric that the dentils should run OVER the edge all around. There is no way for a dentil to end before the edge unless the entire dentil image appears (in that case the dentil exactly opposite must be almost if not entirely missing.

2. The dentil arc is NOT a series of short straight lines but rather a more or less smooth circle of short arc segments. The die sinker could overlap the punch to make the circle close correctly. Spacing variations occur ONLY at the joins. Because dentils are on the edge of the die they are easily damaged so look for evidence of recutting on the die before assuming a coin is fake. Length also can vary slightly if the arc is set a fraction of a mm too close to center.

3. Some forgers making copy dies will extend the dentils to the edge of their fake dies by simply engraving straight lines to the edge of the die. This is incorrect. The dentils are actually losenge shaped with slightly curved sides.

4. I am still uncertain if the dentils are identical at all mints. They are so fragile that high grade examples for study are harder to get than for internal die features. The edge designs vary mint to mint by intent. When a banker stacked a pile of 8 reales he could theoretically distinguish the mints and remove coins from mints he either wanted or did not want. The edge was more than just a simple anti-counterfeiting devise.

So in summary the features on an 8R die are in almost all cases different and the difference was intentional on the part of Spanisg authorities.
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 Posted 10/18/2018  11:21 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add swamperbob to your friends list
nss-52 That "extra window" is difficult to evaluate from a picture alone. We are dealing with a transfer image (I am of the opinion that the coins were injection molded as are many Chinese fakes) and that process can produce some minor differences impression to impression. I can perhaps explain what I mean this way, if in the process of impressing the positive master copy of the coin into the plastic matrix that will become the mold, a small stray piece of the matrix may adhere to the positive image and then fall away on the next impression adding what looks like a window to that and only that image. Most injection molds have multiple images arrayed in a circle that is perfectly balanced so the metal spreads evenly. If I were doing this 4 or 6 coins would be easiest to produce per pour. The molds I have seen and worked with all had diameters under 14 inches.

The matching features are small raised dots on the die surfaces and arrangements of dentils (crowing or separation) that appear on each coin in the same places.
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 Posted 10/19/2018  12:19 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Squire Wilson to your friends list
Thanks a lot for the detailed explanation swamperbob

I am really interested to learn what the remaining 5 flaws are are

Squire
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 Posted 10/19/2018  12:37 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add cableguy815 to your friends list

Quote:
I am really interested to learn what the remaining 5 flaws are


As am I. It is good to see you are doing better Swamperbob, and are doing what you do best, educating the interested masses.
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 Posted 10/19/2018  01:08 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add swamperbob to your friends list
The 6 flaws were that there were 6 identical copies of the coin.

It is of course extremely difficult to find two or three well circulated 8Rs from the same die pair so 6 at one time was something special.
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 Posted 10/19/2018  10:41 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add cableguy815 to your friends list
That's not fair Bob! That was a trick question.
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 Posted 10/19/2018  11:52 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add swamperbob to your friends list
cableguy815 Yes it was!

I said;


Quote:
Here is a clue there are 6 reasons.


I said reasons - not flaws. It pays to read the text as written not as you think it was written. It is the same way you have to read seller descriptions. Word for word.

I was having just a bit of fun since most sellers of forgeries only put them up one at a time.
Edited by swamperbob
10/19/2018 11:59 am
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