My grades are back and here's how I did vs my guesses. A couple I thought high on, but were lower grades where the variety/error was the important aspect. A few more important coins I was conservative, so net wins. We agree on the majority, so feeling somewhat vindicated.

No way line 1 is a G6, but whatever. This specimen is about the scarce
Cud variety.
Stoked line two got a straight MS :) Beautiful color and the only 1882 die-clashed
Indian cent that I have ever come across, so I'm happy.
The 1796 Draped could have been AG3. Definitely a better grade than the Liberty Cap, but they both got F2.
The 1807 they gave AG3 Details; the Det is a real ticky tacky nitpick considering some of the corroded coins I see straight grade. Oh well, won't impact value much.
The 1824 10 cent, the dealer had it as VG, but I talked him down to a G price. ANACS agrees with me.
The second die clash dime is interesting. MS60 are weird grades these day, and its not a "heavy" variety like the other that leaves a clear imprint on both sides. At least we agree there is a clashing.
The 1916 D (Bottom line) was in a SEGS as a MS64. A straight shooting dealer sold as a raw AU55. ANACS gives AU58. Props to Legacy in SLC for for selling the coin and not the holder.