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Replies: 25 / Views: 4,091 |
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Pillar of the Community
United States
3253 Posts |
9's too close together for S-188. And the position of the R relative to the top hair locks is wrong for that variety.
Edited by philadelphian 08/08/2013 2:12 pm
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2077 Posts |
I don't think the dies themselves were counterfeit. Both show the crack through the R, although one is pretty faint. I don't think a counterfeiter would have gone to that much trouble.
As far as the 1799 goes, firstly, LIBERTY is way to close to the top of the head for either 1799 die. Also, the date is too close together and the numbers don't have the right lean. How a 1797 reverse got paired with a 1798 obverse is a mystery.
Edited by OldSkoolMadSkilz 08/08/2013 2:30 pm
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2077 Posts |
Eureka! The counterfeiter actually tooled the hair! Only viable explanation.
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New Member
 United States
12 Posts |
OldSkool I love your enthusiasm! I actually considered retooled hair as a plausible explanation as well. But one of the characteristics of an S-136 is that the date is separated slightly between 17 and 97. Also the waves of hair on top of the head do not align the same way with LIBERTY.
It's really an unusual coin, even if it is probably not authentic. I was ready to dismiss it as such until I found the 1797 with identically matching reverse.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2077 Posts |
Oh, it's unquestionably not authentic. When the artist retooled the date, he probably did the 97 first and then noticed that they did not match the appearance of the 17, so he retooled them too, just to match. Yes, the top hair wave is slightly different, but that may have been reworked too. It was actually fairly well executed.
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New Member
 United States
12 Posts |
Ok, I'm noting your opinion that it is a retooled 1797. Thank you!
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Pillar of the Community
United States
3253 Posts |
Well, the counterfeiter didn't add a gram to the weight along the way. I'm assuming this is a die transfer copy made from a genuine S-136, then the counterfeiter took the reverse die he made and paired it with his new 1799 fake obverse die for a more lucrative product. With luck and a sharp eye, you found that second coin as well.
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New Member
 United States
12 Posts |
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
17884 Posts |
1 and 7 are too close, 7 font isn't quite right the base of the 7 is wrong, the shape of the first 9 isn't right the upper opening is different, the second 9 is too small and shaped wrong too narrow across the bottom end. And the date just doesn't come that bold on the 1799. The Heritage piece is much higher grade, and the date is nowhere near and sharp and crisp as the date on the original posters coin.
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New Member
 United States
12 Posts |
Conder thank you for your thoughtful response. Your observations are spot-on when comparing the coin to the S-188. I suppose the comparison that I was drawing between the two dates lies in the fact that the 2nd 9 is closer to the bust and the lower part of that 9 nearly touches the loop. So this coin is clearly not an S-188 (or 189 for that matter). Then again, the S-136 reverse has conveniently ruled out that possibility. But what if, for the sake of debate only, this coin is a previously unknown variety? I know the odds of that are quite slim, yet the details of the coin are compelling. There should be no question that the reverse is that of the S-136. The two die cracks on the reverse die (seen better in the mint state S-136 example also at Heritage, link in my previous post) account for the weakness in TE on the left and ER on the right. Since the breaks in the reverse die do not allow for even distribution of the high pressure during minting, (according to physics) the opposite areas (obverse top and bottom) of the coin - away from the breaks should receive more pressure thereby producing higher relief. That would account for the crispness of both the date and the LIBERTY motto. That is manifested on BOTH the 1797 AND 1799.
I know this may sound far-fetched (no, crazy!) to many here on the forum, but different die combinations were used all the time back then. If there exists a 1798, reverse of '96 (S-155 and 156), why can't there be a 1798, reverse of 97? Isn't it possible that the mint ran off a few of these and decided that the reverse die was just too rusted and broken? This coin could've simply been one that received the 1799 overstamp. Obviously they went through a lot of dies that year.
I'm having trouble accepting that the coin is a completely retooled 1797, and the perfect match of the S-136 reverse along with the look and feel of it makes me think the coin is not a fake. So what exactly is it?
Ok, I'm off to the rubber room! lol
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Replies: 25 / Views: 4,091 |