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A New NCS Graded 8 Reales.

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swamperbob's Avatar
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 Posted 02/25/2013  10:21 pm Show Profile   Bookmark this topic Add swamperbob to your friends list Get a Link to this Message Number of Subscribers
Tonight I won another TPG slabbed 8 Reales this time an 1844 Zs OM guaranteed as genuine by NCS.

I can't believe my luck.



A-New-NCS-Graded-8-Reales.

A-New-NCS-Graded-8-Reales.

A-New-NCS-Graded-8-Reales.

Getting ready for my new book.
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jcmworld's Avatar
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567 Posts
 Posted 02/25/2013  10:46 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jcmworld to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Nice coin. Very nice coin. You can see all the spines on the cactus very well. I have a Peruvian 8 Reales, 1831 MM, and a Guatemalan 4 Soles, 1857, on the way to me right now. Central/South American silver is just plain interesting (and fun), and I can't resist getting a piece or two here and there.
Is there any difference between the grading services in this area (South/Central American silver) as to accuracy of grading, fake detection, etc? Just curious.
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swamperbob's Avatar
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5362 Posts
 Posted 02/25/2013  10:54 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add swamperbob to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
jcmworld You ask:
Quote:
Is there any difference between the grading services in this area (South/Central American silver) as to accuracy of grading, fake detection, etc? Just curious.


Actually that is the issue I am trying to explore with the members on the forum.

Do you think NCS did a good job with this coin?
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RealPeso's Avatar
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426 Posts
 Posted 02/26/2013  12:30 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add RealPeso to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Oh man this is getting too crazy for me! Aren't these guys (NCS) affiliate, members, subsidiary or whatever of NCG? I can't believe they are doing this! This one isn't even tricky to spot as a counterfeit like the 1830 Mo you posted a few days ago. Badly shaped cap, odd font on legend and wrong eagle feathers design are a few things that jump out at me. By far the cap is what really jumped out at me when I first saw this coin.
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jfransch's Avatar
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1801 Posts
 Posted 02/26/2013  12:56 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jfransch to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Bob
I think you may have a counterfeit slab on this one. The grader would have to be suffering flashbacks from a misguided youth to slab this coin as real. Is there a way to verify the slab itself?
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swamperbob's Avatar
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 Posted 02/26/2013  01:03 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add swamperbob to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
RealPeso Yes they are an NGC affiliate.

That is why I am beginning to seriously question exactly what is happening?

I know ebay relies on NGC/NCS being top tier but I have never seen one this far off from ANACS. I think NGC is dropping to third spot at least for me.

I will report this soon to Judith at ebay Safety and Security when I make a normal report. I was VERY surprised (but very happy as well) that this coin was NOT reported to the ebay committee. I was the high bidder but would have had to vote for the termination of the auction. I am buying a few of these to use in my next planned book on Cap and Ray counterfeits. I want to write a chapter on the pitflls of TPG slabs for the Cap and Ray series in particular.

It is just very strange to have several appear at once. I wonder what will come up next.

And by the way, for the record, you are 100% correct in classifying this one. It is a Contemporary Circulating Counterfeit - a rather common one that I own perhaps a dozen copies of. But this is the first graded by one of the big three - a very serious error indeed.

I did see one just like this before encapsulated by National Numismatic Certification (centsless - Bob Johnston of Florida) but I lost that "MS" example because I wouldn't go high enough. This one is actually better all around and cheaper.

So somewhere someone has this same coin in the NNC slab. I hope it is another counterfeit collector like myself.
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swamperbob's Avatar
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 Posted 02/26/2013  01:20 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add swamperbob to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
jfransch Unlike NGC - the database for NCS does not include a photo of the coin in the holder. That would be much better of course. But the NCS look up did return the correct description as stated on the slab.

When it arrives I plan to check the slab very closely of course. But I believe this one was really encapsulated - they thought it was real.

Your surprise about equalled mine. It comes right after the 1830 Riddell variety - within a couple weeks of when I started reviewing slabbed auctions. I actually had been avoiding them because I figured they did better than this. I had really never expected to see a Contemporary Counterfeit in an NGC slab. It wasn't until the Rupia last year that I started wondering.

NOW I LOOK AT EVERY NGC SLABBED COIN. Just in case.

I am really looking for an example of my avatar in a slab. That would be priceless to me.
Edited by swamperbob
02/26/2013 01:21 am
Pillar of the Community
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1962 Posts
 Posted 03/01/2013  03:56 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add realeswatcher to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Bob, really nice preservation. As you hinted at, my impression is that's a "common" CC (most Zacatecas of this date range are, yes?), but still... Off-hand, I'm not sure... is this supposed to be silver-plated (making this one a near fully intact example), or is that a solid alloy color?

Maybe this was why they stopped putting things in dedicated "NCS" slabs... perhaps they were all running around high on Jeweluster in that room.
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swamperbob's Avatar
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 Posted 03/01/2013  5:23 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add swamperbob to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
The coin arrived today. The slab is intact and it was clearly an NCS error. Even my wife who knows NOTHING about counterfeit coins recognized that the coin was bad. She has seen enough real coins to know the difference.

So I think there is no excuse whatsoever about the coin being slabbed. How and why is beyond me.

It is the best example of this counterfeit type I have ever seen. I own a few different metal types made from this die pair (3). This one appears to be a standard low grade silver which is the most common sub-variety. There is a clad version but I see no evidence of that being the case here.

realeswatcher You say:

Quote:
my impression is that's a "common" CC (most Zacatecas of this date range are, yes?)


The answer is Yes and No. Yes this is a common type and no not all 1844 Zs counterfeits are common.

This particular 1844 Zs is what I call a common type. I have seen perhaps 50 to 100 of them (all in the past 15 years). I was worried about it when I first saw it but I have resolved that issue. It was apparently not an issue that traveled north.

I do not track over 50. (Anything above 50 examples is common). There are two 1844 Zs varieties that I classify as common and 2 others that are scarce. A scarce counterfeit is one I have seen 10 to 50 times. These 4 varieties I would say are possible to locate if you wait long enough.

However, I have seen a total of 12 varieties of 1844 Zs CC 8Rs. So that means for 8 of 12 varieties I have seen fewer than 10 each and 4 of the 8 are unique varieties.

There is no true scale of rarity for contemporary counterfeits. They are not well publicised. I would love to change that and make the information readily available, but I doubt most collectors would join in. I think it would be great to register every CC coin there is. But how would that effort be paid for?

All contemporary counterfeits (or nearly all) are more scarce than originals and that is as it should be. The number of CC coins at any given point in history averaged 1 % of the circulating coins and peaked at about 10% in the Hard Times. That still means that there should be 10 originals for every counterfeit.

Today in pocket change - are there counterfeits? If so how many? What is the percentage today?

The fact that counterfeits are worth so little has NOTHING to do with actual rarity and everything to do with simple demand. I do not think there are 100 serious collectors of counterfeits (like myself) in the entire world.
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 Posted 03/01/2013  5:58 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add realeswatcher to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
That's definitely a more complete explanation... Just to my semi-observant eyes, I've noticed through the years that there are a LOT of 1834, 1842, 1844 Zacatecas CCs out there, and many seem to be repeats of the same fake. Interesting that there ARE rarer types of 1844-Zs out there...

How about 1842-Zs? That seems to be THE most frequently encountered date/mint of Cap Ray CCs in my experience.


Quote:

There is no true scale of rarity for contemporary counterfeits. They are not well publicised. I would love to change that and make the information readily available, but I doubt most collectors would join in. I think it would be great to register every CC coin there is. But how would that effort be paid for?


A) I have seen enough to know that you yourself are on (nearly) every single faker Cap & Ray on the Bay like flies on.... I can't imagine that there is anyone more serious than you are in this arena. YOU are by far your own best resource...

B) Regarding most collectors joining in... I'm sure from ebay battles, you have a fairly good rolodex of fellow Cap & Ray people... Collectors SO pedantic about such a specialized area wouldn't help in pooling resources? Or, do they all have dreams of doing their own books?

C) "Info readily available..." -- I think the fact that you have this awesome first-hand resource in the form of the Riddell book helps immensely... How many collecting areas have such a spectacular early source to rely on? 1845... with all those plates?! It just needs a little publicity, like your idea for a book OR... ever thought of doing your own website?

If the Kleeberg 2R people can drop several hundred per for desirable pieces (paging colonialjohn...), I'm sure the Cap & Rays CCs could ultimately draw good interest as well, especially given the wide circulation they saw in the West/"Old Southwest".

D) "How would that be paid for?"... SELF-PUBLISH. The original Kleeberg reference is simply a speech that was printed out... and was not NEARLY exhaustive. I'm certain you could duplicate that without much effort. You could literally sit down and start typing "SwamperBob's musings about Old Fake Mexican 8Rs" and it would absolutely be infinitely better than what's out there...
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swamperbob's Avatar
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 Posted 03/01/2013  7:38 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add swamperbob to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
realeswatcher Your semi-observant eye is fairly accurate. The most common dates (based on raw numbers) are 1832, 1834, and 1842.

Close contenders after that are 1829, 1830, 1836, 1838 and 1844.

Even dates outnumber odd by a wide margin. (No reason they just do).

There are a few Riddells that are scarce to common and appear at least one time a year on ebay. That list is:

221 1829 Zs AO
223 ZS OM dates 1830, 1831, 1832, 1833, 1834
237 Zs OM dates 1834, 1842 (Two varieties A,B)
246 1835 Zs OM
247 1836 Zs OM
274 Zs OM dates 1836, 1842
279 1843 Zs OM
302 Go MJ dates 1832, 1834
314 1834 Go PJ
324 Go PJ dates 1834, 1835, 1836, 1837, 1838, 1839
350,351 Do RL dates 1826, 1827, 1838
365 Do RM dates 1832, 1834
371 Do RM dates 1832, 1834
373 1836 Do RM
377 1839 Do RM
404 1838 Ms OM
406 1827 G AO
412 1840 G PJ and G J
417 1836 Ds RI

Of these there are 5 that are common

233 1832 and 1834 ZsOM
237 !834 and 1842 Zs OM (A variety only)
274 1834 Zs OM
371 1832 Do RM and mules
374 1834 Do RM and mules

Overall these 5 are also the most common including even the non-Riddells.

The 371/374 family is overall the MOST COMMON forgery type that exists. There are 2-3 per month on average. It is also a hubbed die family with several die varieties. It is a fun family because of interrelated matings that I am still actively working on.

The 237 is the second most common of all counterfeits coming up every two months or so but has the widest range of alloys of any of the contemporaries. It is also my favorite counterfeit because it was my first. I am approaching 100 copies of that Riddell # in my own collection because I collect it by alloy, striking variety, and die state. I even collect by cancellation method. But I do not buy every one I see. I pass over 2 out of 3 because there is no difference by my criteria.
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swamperbob's Avatar
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 Posted 03/02/2013  2:07 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add swamperbob to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Here is another posting of the "Flat Cap" 1844 Zs variety raw.



A-New-NCS-Graded-8-Reales.

Here is the other very common non-Riddell 1844 Zs which I call "ball Toes"



A-New-NCS-Graded-8-Reales.

Here is one I have seen 2 of which is Rare on my scale. I just call it "crude".


A-New-NCS-Graded-8-Reales.

And for the record here is a real 1844 Zs OM - only one die style was made with NO major varieties known.


A-New-NCS-Graded-8-Reales.

So my question is was there any reason that NCS can use as an excuse for what I see as a huge error?
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