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Replies: 47 / Views: 5,720 |
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
1949 Posts |
Thanks for the kind posting, Canadian-varieties, and to the several others who sent me nice notes privately. I truly appreciate it, and for the longtime business patronage from many on this forum. No grudges being held, the Coin World is too small and life is too short.
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
1949 Posts |
Well, this is what I got on a Guarantee re-submission... Quote: ORDER DETAILS Submission 986502, Order 21592052, 1 Item
Your submission has been delivered.
ARRIVEDRECEIVED 4/16/2019 PROCESSINGSHIPPED 4/22/2019 DELIVERED Line Items Cert # PCGS # Description Grade Country TrueView® 1 1 36722895 520889 1859 1C DPN9 T4, BN MS63BN Canada
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
1353 Posts |
Unfortunately, it is not a #4. It is one of the lesser re-punched 9's. I hope you can get PCGS to straighten things out. Under their current coin numbers it should go in a regular 1859 narrow 9 holder. Here is a #4. https://www.PCGS.com/cert/21674672
http://www.victoriancent.com2011 & 2025 Fred Bowman Literary Award Winner, 2020 J. Douglas Ferguson Award Winner, & 2022 Paul Fiocca Award Winner. Life Member of RCNA.
Edited by bosox 04/25/2019 11:56 am
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1101 Posts |
That's too bad that PCGS still didn't get it right even after resubmission. Will PCGS guarantee and make up the value difference to the owner of a coin that has been mis-attributed?
I feel for you jdmern. This has got to be frustrating. I have also bought coins from you in the past and know you to be completely honest and trustworthy. I hope PCGS will get this right for you.
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
1442 Posts |
I know what PCGS is doing here.
Until jdmern's 9/9 type gets its own PCGS number, it will be grouped under DP9-4.
PCGS has done this with many varieties. I'll give you an example.
The PCGS 1881H "Repunched N" can be any one of 4 varieties: Triple N, N/N, Spur N or a slight N/N.
I sent all my 1881H Triple Punched Ns to get slabbed as PCGS "Repunched N". I've also done this with the Spur Ns as well.
Only when PCGS created a separate PCGS number for the 1881H Triple N was I able to get my Triple Ns reslabbed properly.
I believe that's exactly what PCGS has done with the 1859 DP9-4 (this designation will include several subtypes or die pairs until PCGS assigns a separate number to the subtypes).
Just leave it in the DP9-4 slab. Simply consider it a "DP9-4 family" rather than a single die pair. That's basically what PCGS has done. I dont agree with PCGS's approach, but it's done this with a bunch of Canadian varieties.
I've seen PCGS go down this road a while back (grouping different varieties under a single name) and I'm not sure there is a way to correct it anymore.
Edited by canadian-varieties 04/26/2019 05:26 am
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Pillar of the Community
 Canada
5591 Posts |
PCGS is letting things get out of hand. There is no way in h*ll that they are going to start listing all the minutia that engulfs the 1859 date. In order for any coin to be called a DP#4, it has to have ALL of the markers, not just a weakly repunched N. I think that you are messing up what was a fairly concrete submission and verification process, C-V. By dreaming up new names for old Zoell varieties and then submitting them for a new certification category, there are just too many fingers in the pie. You could do that with CCCS, because he would put ANYTHING that the submitter wanted on the certification .. I would hope that PCGS is both smarter and more honest with their cert process than CCCS used to be. You mention the '81 triple punched N's ... there are 3 different types. Which one did you convince PCGS to list as triple-punch N? I also don't know what you mean by "PCGS has done this with a bunch of Canadian varieties".
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1101 Posts |
Quote: In order for any coin to be called a DP#4, it has to have ALL of the markers, not just a weakly repunched 9. I would agree with Bill on that. PCGS needs to educate themselves on the coins they are going to certify and be absolutely accurate, otherwise their certification is of no value and their guarantee means nothing. Certainly mistakes will be made, but when they are pointed out they should do the research needed to accurately correct them.
Edited by Phil310 04/27/2019 09:20 am
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
1442 Posts |
okiecoiner, your beef is entirely with PCGS. I have never asked PCGS to recognize a new variety, you need to speak to bosox and others about the new varieties that PCGS is recognizing and assigning PCGS Numbers to. I only follow PCGS's lead AFTER it has created a variety. But let me give you one of dozens of examples of where PCGS has messed up. This is so easy to verify, even you can handle it. Please just click on the link and check the 3 photos. https://www.PCGS.com/valueview/vict...508088&h=popLook at the 3 different varieties that PCGS labels 1870 10c Narrow 0/0. One PCGS #, but three completely different repunched Narrow 0s. "By dreaming up new names for old Zoell varieties and then submitting them for a new certification category, there are just too many fingers in the pie" - I have NEVER done this, so take your false accusations and throw them at someone else. As far as I know, only bosox and zonad have submitted coins to PCGS and requested the naming of "new varieties". I dont know how to make this any clearer for you. PCGS has dropped the ball here from day 1. And just like I showed you with the example of 3 different 1870 repunched Narrow 0/0s, there is no way for PCGS to correct their mistake now that they've lumped all those different varieties together, slabbed them and sent those slabs out into the world. Most buyers will never send those slabs back to "correct" the mistakes.  p.s. if you need to see more examples of where PCGS has completely messed up slabbing Canadian varieties, I will be happy to post more. Long story short, jdmern has done absolutely nothing wrong here and it makes perfect sense for him to leave the coin in the PCGS DP9-4 slab as is and sell it as such.
Edited by canadian-varieties 04/26/2019 2:04 pm
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1101 Posts |
CV, I think your examples may not apply exactly. Your two examples of a N/N and 0/0 do not have identifying numbers.
If jdmern's coin was labeled only DP9 then I would agree it would be acceptable to have different dies in that catagory. But the DP9 T4 is a specific single die variety well recognized and in a number of catalogs. PCGS just mis-attributed it.
I don't think it would be proper to sell it labeled as a DP9 T4. If it were just labeled DP9, I think that would be fine.
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Pillar of the Community
 Canada
5591 Posts |
Sorry C-V, I misinterpreted what you said above about the 1881's ... that you had several types of T/P's N's you wanted cert'd and more than one "spur" (the one in Regina in the only one), not the one in Canada. It still burns me that they still have the 1896 far 6 in PCGS, when most collectors know there are an infinite number of what constitutes "far" and whether it's up, down, or canted. I have absolutely no use for ANY TPG, but held out hope that PCGS would be truer to numismatics. Some of that ire rubbed off on you .. pardon me.
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
1463 Posts |
Geesh what a boondoggle!! Thanks for sharing and following up
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
1949 Posts |
Boondoggle is the right the word! Seems there really is no consensus on this piece. I certainly understand that the expert specialists feel extremely strongly in one direction (and considering they are the ones who would be paying the extra money for the variety, they certainly have a very valid point), while the experts at PCGS seem to feel just as strongly in regards to several similar varieties qualifying as the 'same variety'.  Certainly an eye opening experience for several reasons, but I wish it had been with a lesser valued piece!
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
1353 Posts |
I agree Boardwalk did nothing wrong here (in fact they have tried to straighten things out and may well lose on the coin), but I still think, given the current state of PCGS varieties and coin numbers, this coin belongs in a Narrow 9 holder. JMHO.
http://www.victoriancent.com2011 & 2025 Fred Bowman Literary Award Winner, 2020 J. Douglas Ferguson Award Winner, & 2022 Paul Fiocca Award Winner. Life Member of RCNA.
Edited by bosox 04/26/2019 10:39 pm
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
1442 Posts |
okiecoiner...no problem, and you're right about the 1896 Far 6, it's the same kind of situation, PCGS doesn't differentiate among the many 1896 Far 6s. Lumps them all together. jdmern, if it will make you feel any better, here is your exact 9/9 variety (Haxby E12), but this time, PCGS attributed it as a DP9 No.2, MS64RB, Sold by Heritage Auctions 2015 for $1997.50USD. You can confirm it's the same exact coin as yours (die crack on leaf 7) https://coins.ha.com/itm/canada/wor...bnail-071515That coin was in the "Eric Beckman Collection of Canadian Coins". Note that even Heritage Auctions simply called it a DP9 Type 2. That's why I said, just leave it as PCGS DP9-4. and believe it or not, but your coin shows up again as a PCGS DP9-2 on Heritage Auctions, this time in the 2011 September Long Beach Signature Auction PCGS DP9-2 MS64BN for $1610 USD. https://coins.ha.com/itm/canada/wor...bnail-071515That gives you an idea of how common this problem is (and how scarce a real DP9-2 is). PCGS really has trouble with your 9/9, and honestly, in the future, PCGS will probably continue labeling these as either DP9-2 or DP9-4. In terms of the Haxby 1859 Catalog, your coin is a Haxby E12. You can see it here https://www.vickycents.com/rev-e12.html
Edited by canadian-varieties 04/27/2019 03:44 am
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1101 Posts |
Quote: PCGS will probably continue labeling these as either DP9-2 or DP9-4. Or DP9-1 like the one papeldog posted near the beginning of this thread. Good research to find those CV! To those of us who study the 1859's these four different DP 9's are easy to distinguish, but to be fair to PCGS, their attributors must have hundreds or thousands of varieties from different countries and denominations to try and keep up with. I'm sure it is not an easy job. As my Father-in-law often said "pobody's nerfect".
Edited by Phil310 04/27/2019 08:07 am
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Replies: 47 / Views: 5,720 |