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Posts posted by markflorida
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PCGS Paris are open and have a fast turn around.
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Sorry to reopen this old topic up. But someone asked about getting coins graded by PCGS. Back in 2016 the only offering was London Coins. They did and still do submit coins for you, but charge a hefty 80% on top of the fee. A man is doing it on Facebook with NGC, only a few pounds fee over the grading fee but some coins have taken 5 months to come back
I joined PCGS Europe for £69, I just had 49 coins graded, with insurance and postage to France and back it worked out to be £24.60 a coin. Total turn around was 31 days. Ok I never got the grades I wanted on some, (Who does) but the experience was good and went without a hitch. I will use them in future to grade my coins.
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The Good news about the Kew 2009 50p is that is getting publicity and attracting more collectors. That in its self is good news for us. Once people start collecting 50p coins they often go onto different coins, including older pre-decimal coins and even Sovereigns. A few lucky people found a Kew in change so it has an added excitement for them and encourages others. The A-Z 10p did the same.
The bad news is the copy or fake Kew 50p's on eBay. Some sellers are at least calling them copies or slot fillers for those who don't have a £100 budget for a circulated 2009. But the UNC 2009's are now fetching £200 + and the 2009 Unc coin set are selling for around £230 now, because they include the 2009 Royal Coat of Arms 50p as well.
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On 4/3/2015 at 10:51 AM, azda said:The 1992 EU presidency 50p is also a lower mintage than Kew gardens
Agree this one is often missed. Its a good coin to collect.
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I agree with Paddy, not as desirable as the 50p's but with such low mintage numbers, I think I might buy a couple of UNC sets for myself. They seem to be selling for around £45. I thought they would be in the million mintage figures.
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Thanks Paddy that is a great help.
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I know they are modern coins, but I was asked by a customer and I cannot find them.
Does anyone know the mintage figures of the 2018 A-Z 10p's? He was mostly interested in the business strikes, but if you have a source for the Silver Proofs as well that would help.
Thank you. 😊
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eBay told me they can't take these down. As the lister says they are just plated. Fake slabs, even in the description. So I contacted PCHS as they have the VERO rights.
The problem is some Roughian Rascal will buy them and try and sell them as genuine.
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Acid is used for the colour.
£550! 😮 Great marketing, appealing to the British peoples patriotism. In 15 years time it will be worth 5 oz of silver. I often come across Westminster collection, Westminster Mint, Franklin Mint and Uncle Tom Cobley and all Mint products, from people who wish to sell their fathers or grand fathers collection. They paid an excessive amount for this collective pile of junk. It seems anything that comes with a Shinny Fake Mahogany Box, Certificate of Authenticity and Limited Mintage are the key words needed to reel people in. Can you imagine how many decent rare coins that would actually increase in value with £550? They could get a Full, Half and quarter Sovereign and still have change for fish & chips.
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18 hours ago, craigy said:at spinks ? do i still have to enroll with ngc or can you submit thru spinks and do you know where it is done
cant see anything online about it
There is a few ways to do it. I'm an authorised dealer but currently do not take other peoples coins I have enough of my own to work with. 1. You can join with a membership. 2. You can go via Heritage auctions (ha.com) They are in London and accept submissions, contact them on their own site. 3. Another UK dealer runs a group on Facebook, he takes submissions for you. Below is the link. I will inform him of this page. I hope this helps. Mark..
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The NGC office is open now and has been for two weeks.
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They are intended for circulation. They are business strikes, not proof strikes. Over the last few years the Royal Mints marketing department has come up with all sorts of fancy names. There was only Business strikes or Proofs. The proofs were intended for the monarchs to give to other monarchs and rulers as gifts. Caesar started gifting coins. Hence; The Hobby of Kings.
Later proofs became available for collectors and mints around the globe have made business strikes and proofs. More recently the Royal Mint on its Sovereigns has started , Proof, Brilliant Uncirculated and Bullion. = Three strikes. However in the real world, the so-called Brilliant Uncirculated are just expensive bullion coins, I have had some graded they come back MS60 - MS70. If you get a bullion coins graded they come back the same grades and are worth the same. That said the BU strike is a nice looking coin.
A DPL (Deep Proof Like) is a standard business or bullion strike that is PL (Proof Like) but extremely for want of a better word, Shinny. Thus DPL.
The Penny you have is beautiful and if graded would probably come back DPL, Its almost cameo in appearance. Send it into NGC or PCGS. DPL coins fetch more money and are more sort after than ordinary MS coins. Most of my buyers constantly pay more for the DPL grade.
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On 9/10/2018 at 8:46 AM, copper123 said:I did that as well - horified to see price of kews now.......😥😥
Don't be horrified. Welcome it 😗
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7 hours ago, craigy said:just doesnt make sense to me when people will pay £80 plus for a kew gardens 50p with around a quarter of a million goin into circulation and only 15,000 of some of these £1 , i dont get it
It's not the circulation numbers that make them valuable every time. (Sometime sit does).
Thousands of people collect 50p coins, they find them in the change and they have been circulated. Low mintage proof strikes have not been in cash registers and parking meters, they are too fancy and expensive for many to start collecting. As they get addicted like we did then they pay £100 for a 2009 Kew 50p.
A 1916 D US Dime will fetch over $500 for a G4 one. Yet they minted 264,000. An 1890 US quarter has a strike of just 80,000 yet only worth about $25 for a G4 coin. Mostly because people collect Dimes in the US.
I know it does not make much sense, but thats the coin industry and why most of us love it.
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16 hours ago, Unwilling Numismatist said:I've applied for a part-time job in my local post office.
If you can't beat them ....
Not sure they'll accept my required hours though, 1 hour on the day newly minted coins are delivered.
Haha
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On 9/4/2018 at 11:35 AM, Paddy said:I am also getting lots of requests for them, but mostly from people frustrated because none of them are turning up in circulation! They (like me) prefer to collect circulation coins from circulation at circulation prices instead of paying the Royal Mint's extortionate figures.
It seems those sent for circulation so far were distributed to the post offices and the vast majority were taken up by PO staff for resale on the net.
I suspect (hope) the RM will suddenly flood the market with them early next year.
I agree. I go to the post office everyday shipping my coins to buyers, the lady behind the counter told me I sell nearly as many coins as Mike. "Who is Mike?" I said. "Oh he works here, and he takes all the new 10p coins and sells them on eBay. " She said. I had to bite my tongue. 😡
The idea of the Royal Mint giving them to post offices was to share among the public, but clearly post office employees swap them all out and sell them form anything from 50p -£2.00 each on eBay. That is disgraceful.
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I normally ignore new coins, US State Quarters, Royal Wedding Crowns, Peter Rabbit etc. But the new British Coin-Hunt 10p seems to have struck a chord with many of my buyers. I have never had so many requests before, some want the whole set some want initials and almost all of them want the James Bond coin. Is anyone else having the same response? Personally I prefer older coins, but if it breeds a new generation of coin collectors, I suppose thats good.
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I have reported this same coin 4 times now over a 12 month period on 4 different listing. Fake Gold Double Eagle
Here he is again, same story its his grandpa's coin. I guess the good news is he is paying listing fees each time.
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4 minutes ago, mrbadexample said:That was pulled quickly.
Wow, eBay is getting better at looking at the reports
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Todays eBay fake comes from a seller who should know better. https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/UNITED-STATES1909-SVDB-LINCOLN-1C-PCGS-MS63BN-SCARCE-FIRST-YEAR-ISSUE-99p/401554102770?hash=item5d7e7d59f2:g:OG4AAOSwEtNbJ2eh
The coin is clearly a Red or Red Brown at worst yet its graded Brown. The leaves on the reverse are worn smooth, even an AU50 would have better leaf details. The label is crooked. This exact same cert number came up on eBay.com 18 months ago, someone is using the same cert number because PCGS does not have the original picture listed.
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On 29/12/2017 at 11:49 AM, Guest Stella said:They are of course worth face value. Some collectors see them as nothing more but if you are staring out, its a good place to start. Don't be put off by previous comments. Don't throw them away, keep them and don't clean them, put them in an album and try and collect different years, keeping the best condition ones you have. One day they will be worth more than face value and it's a cheap and easy way to start collecting coins. That is a fascinating and addictive hobby.
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5 hours ago, DrP said:Looks to be in a really nice condition - must have been many hundreds of pounds surely. Unless there is something not right about it - I am no expert. What did it cost? If it was £40- as the slip suggests in the pic then it was either the bargain of the decade or a fake imo.
Don't take my word for it though - others are much more knowledgeable than I about such things - I am just being curious - if it is real then it is a lovely coin. Much better than my E1st shilling by a few hundreds of pounds. :-) Mines worth about 30 to 40 quid. Looking at my coin, it is better than I though - but the portrait has gone - still, it's a gap filler that I wouldn't be able to afford otherwise.
It looks good, and £40 a bargain. If you are concerned take it to a coin shop and ask for a second opinion or consider getting it slabbed. CGC are cheap and are Goode enough to tell you if its real or not. From the pictures it looks good.
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Todays Fake coins. This seller has 9 fake Morgans on one lot and two on another with two Liberty dollars. 1795 & 1804. Selling the second lot for £39. The Liberty dollars would fetch over £70,000 alone.
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Todays eBay sellers has Balls. Just no brains. The exact coin is for sale, he has just copied the exact pictures and listed as if he owns it. The mind boggles.
Below is the correct listing
PCGS
in TPG Discussions
Posted
Looks like the grader was half a sleep. Obviously cleaned.