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Showing content with the highest reputation on 06/18/2020 in all areas

  1. 4 points
    Ooh err missus. I do miss Frankie Howerd.
  2. 3 points
    Pretty sure you can buy these out of China for around two pounds each...AliExpress might be worth checking....
  3. 2 points
    That reminds me Mike, I was once asked to come up with a list of 10 sexual innuendoes... I inadvertently came up with 11, so I had to rub one out.
  4. 2 points
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  6. 2 points
    hear hear, i’ve grown to detest that rag, drinks all round.
  7. 2 points
    I tried to click on the link and was unexpectedly saved from viewing by the Daily Mail pointing out I had an ad blocker The ability to surf randomly in the knowledge the DM will block me from unnecessarily viewing their articles is as good as winning the lottery. Mine's a pint.
  8. 2 points
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  12. 1 point
    This topic is turning in to a script from Finbarr Saunders and his double entendres😂
  13. 1 point
    Well for those who would be offended by glimpsing a Mail article, I'll just say that it was a repeat of the usual. So no great loss. But it still goes to show that the coin continues to attract media attention.
  14. 1 point
    I believe a lot of the prices are down to the Whitman type folders that RM released for the modern 50p. All easy coins to get ,except the 2009 Kew . I know the feeling of needing to fill a gap , so can understand people wanting to pay over the odds to do it. The 1992/93 EEC 50p only had a circulation of 109,000 ( I remember them in my change when I was in my teens ), but sell for half of what a Kew goes for .
  15. 1 point
    There is an alternative explanation for gold not suffering from striking splits in that it is softer and so can deform (spread) more easily. Silver has a problem in that it is extracted from ore whereas gold is found as nodules and not extracted from a salt. Being the path of least resistance, I don't think it a coincidence that gold was fine until debased by Henry VIII. Then you have the question of alloying in the case of silver, with the divergent melting points of the alloy constituents coming into play. I'm pretty certain the more extensive haymarking seen on silver is down to poor metal mix because copper's m.p. is 100 degrees higher than silver compared to 20 degrees between copper and gold, so in the case of the former, the silver will be melted long before the copper.
  16. 1 point
    I hadn't heard of Henry's snicking episode before, thanks. It brought this interesting article to my attention. https://www.cointalk.com/threads/medieval-all-the-moneyers-who-were-in-england-should-be-mutilated.290165/
  17. 1 point
    Here is my best example 1912 at the moment. CGS75
  18. 1 point
    https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/EXTREMELY-RARE-Minting-Error-1-SHILLING-SILVER-COIN-1926-/254606269370?_trksid=p2385738.m4383.l4275.c10
  19. 1 point
    Opened the bathroom cabinet and three bottles of Omega 3 landed on my head. Luckily my wounds were only super fish oil.
  20. 1 point





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