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Showing content with the highest reputation on 01/13/2026 in all areas

  1. I had the luck to pick this one up on ebay , unattributed 😊 An F148 high tide
    7 points
  2. Nice coin, and I wish I had brought one before it got so expensive. £200 was a good deal even then I think.
    1 point
  3. I did message the seller to tell him what it was but he chose not to amend the description and luckily several people recognised it.
    1 point
  4. Another one of these sold on ebay a couple of days ago for over £260. Perhaps a little better than the one Pete pictured above last year, but not great. Again not attributed, but nevertheless attracted a lot of interest.
    1 point
  5. One is ON the truncation (Rare), the other is UNDER the truncation (Common)
    1 point
  6. 7 Million for 3rd (Veiled) portrait, 1300 for 2nd (Jubilee head) portrait.
    1 point
  7. I think people get a bit worked up over the question of cleaning as the topic is somewhat nuanced. Every coin in circulation showing signs of wear has effectively been cleaned because the act of circulation ensures that contact is made with other surfaces which rub against each other. i.e. nothing different to taking a the use of chemical cloth to a coin and rubbing. That just speeds up the process. The only thing that is offensive in the eyes of most collectors is a case of a polished coin, with or without the use of chemical substances. Personally I love toning for the fact it gives added confidence that the surfaces have not been messed about with, but even that has a few caveats because silver dip will leave a residue on the coin which over time will give the piece in question a typically pinkish hue. Any coin in someone's pocket will end up from friction with lots of faint parallel lines, because they were there. Without polishing chemically, I defy anyone to see the difference between pocket rub and a soft cloth, though clearly it would be possible in the case of demonetised coins to use your loaf and conclude that not being in circulation any more, the only option left is deliberate. In the case of the Morgan above, if the surfaces aren't reflective, probably not other than 'cleaning' from circulation, because there is clearly wear to the high points.
    1 point
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