Quote:
Basement slabber. Ignore the grade.
Which is easy to do, since the slab doesn't actually mention any attempt at grading. The seller might have name-dropped a grade, but the slab does not. I'm pretty sure "VG" isn't an attempt at grading here, though what it does mean in this case, remains a mystery.
Quote:I wonder what "Authenticated" means. What is there to authenticate? About all I can figure is that someone at the Exchange took a look at it and said, "Yep, that definitely looks like a
Morgan silver dollar. I hereby pronounce it 'authenticated'."
"Authentication" means for Bradfield Exchange the same thing that it means for the TPGs: that, in the opinion of Bradfield Exchange, this is a genuine
Morgan dollar and not a counterfeit. There is an implicit assumption that Bradfield Exchange will stand behind this assertion, and offer you a refund should they prove to be wrong about its genuineness.
Whether or not you think Bradfield is competent in such authentication, and/or whether their guarantee is trustworthy, or even whether Bradfield would feel obligated to support that guarantee to a third-party or fourth-party buyer, are questions left unresolved.
Also questionable is whether or not this coin would get a clean grade at all. Given how badly scuffed and scratched Liberty's cheeks appear to be, I would not rule out the possibility that this coin has already been deemed ungradable by a
TPG, and Bradfield thought the coin could be better marketed in an ambiguous Bradfield slab than in an unambiguous
TPG Details slab (or bodybag).
Don't say "infinitely" when you mean "very"; otherwise, you'll have no word left when you want to talk about something really infinite. - C. S. Lewis