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Replies: 37 / Views: 5,763 |
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Valued Member
United States
70 Posts |
Quote: You have a Judd-1749!? Yeah, were gonna need pics 3 pics. Obverse, reverse & edge Judd 1750.
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Valued Member
United States
70 Posts |
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Valued Member
United States
70 Posts |
Quote: Cascade, he did post a picture of the coin on a newspaper dated today in another thread. It looks like he is interested in, for lack of a better term, coins made of the "wrong" metal. There are of course people with enough money to buy super rare coins. I'd expect people like that to be fairly knowledgeable about numismatics and some might like to socialize with other avid numismatists even if most of us couldn't afford those sorts of coins. No reason one of them couldn't visit a forum like this! d it Your right. That's my focus. I love the 1943 bronze Lincoln, but can't afford one, so I have similar coins that are just as rare, if not more rare, but not as expensive. I'll post more in the next few days. I love this coin in that its a super rare Morgan, not many like it around.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
3169 Posts |
Well that is sweet  What else do you have?
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Valued Member
United States
70 Posts |
Quote: Well that is sweet What else do you have? Transition to clad error set, take a look at my post in modern mint errors.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
7390 Posts |
Nice. I and wasn't questioning you having one. It's just impolite to drop a bomb like that without pics 
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
17884 Posts |
Quote: Condor, the Master Dies create the working dies. It is the working dies that incuse. The Master dies create the working hubs, the working hubs create the working dies. There are six stages, galvano creates master hub (singular), master hub creates master die (usually singular), master die creates working hubs (multiple), working hubs create working dies (many), and working dies create coins (many many). The galvano is raised and correctly oriented, the master hub is raised and correctly oriented, the master die is incuse and reversed, the working hubs are raised and correctly oriented, and the working dies are incuse and reversed. The image is raised and correctly oriented. If it was a master die the working die would also be raised and correctly oriented. Coins produced would be incuse and reversed. The image pictured is a hub (probably the Master hub) not a die.
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Replies: 37 / Views: 5,763 |