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Chris Perkins

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Everything posted by Chris Perkins

  1. It's actually not a bar, but an ounce coin. No difference really I suppose. With postage it comes to near enough £10.00. Can you send a tenner cash to London? With a note to say it's for the Sunshine Silver ounce, and your address of course.... Mr C H Perkins PO Box 49432 London, SE20 7ZJ Not as quick as paypal etc, but it's fee free that way. By default the forum doesn't display posts/topics over 30 days old, but they are still there. I think there's a drop down at the bottom of the different areas where you can choose to 'Show All' or words to that effect.
  2. I've got a Sunshine Mining 1985 .999 ounce featuring an eagle. As struck but has a couple of toning spots. And 2x M. Theresa Talers, which I know are only .800 (or is it 835) and just contain 23.4g silver each. All three for AG bullion plus 10%.
  3. No, you're welcome to put wanted ads in here too! I'm afraid I don't have any. Do you want any other ounce coins or just Britannias?
  4. I assume this was just commissioned by that firm as a giveaway advert. I suspect Berlin was just the name of the company/person (or the type of wool) and that it has nothing to do with Germany. I've not seen one, but that doesn't mean it's rare or valuable.
  5. I assume that was just commissioned by that firm as a giveaway advert. I suspect Berlin was just the name of the company/person and that it has nothing to do with Germany. I've not seen one, but that doesn't mean it's rare or valuable.
  6. I've had a few of those, including one with full lustre, which I think I sold for around £25.00. They seem pretty common, were obviously not official, but a great idea and clearly sold well at the time.
  7. Yes, I know its all them, but who actually does the grading?
  8. Yes that certainly raises at least an eyebrow. I don't think London coins do all the grading themselves though. I think they have recruited competent third parties to do the grading. I may be wrong.
  9. That's the thing....just because a 1965 Crown or 1967 penny is MS68 (or I believe CGS use a 100 point system so MS95 or whatever) doesn't mean that there aren't thousands and thousands more in the same grade! Why pay over the odds for something there are thousands of? Sounds a bit like a 'Westminster Collection' business model to me.
  10. My opinion is the same as those already aired. Slabbing is all very well, but you're buying the coin not the slab. No doubt CGS are making good money out of it, and why not. I do find the 'best known' thing a bit odd though for common coins. If there are, for example, thousands and thousands of BU 1960s coins, how can one of them be classed as best known when it would be impossible to examine all of them. Surely hundreds and hundred of them are the same as 'best known', or better. I don't see how CGS have been going long enough to have examined the vast majority of certain coin types.
  11. Is it even a coin? It's certainly a funny shape for a coin. Perhaps some kind of stone set in a mount?
  12. It simply depends if the seller wants to fart around on ebay, doing pictures, waiting for the listing to end, waiting for payment, encountering perhaps the odd unreliable buyer on the way. Or if she simply wants to send it and receive a bank transfer on the same day with zero risk or hassle!
  13. What a relief that no-one capable of spending £12k on a coin would be stupid enough to buy what is now nothing more than a piece of earth which used to be a brass threepence!
  14. And I'd better mention that this coin set is now sold.
  15. Go for it. What was it, around bullion or something like that?
  16. I'd certainly give you full bullion for it, which is £291 for a kg currently.
  17. I've certainly spent them when I've had them and they've been less than perfect. The reason none are seen is probably because they get pulled out of change and kept as oddities.
  18. Or, the cased silver proof version with small certificate and encapsulated etc is probably worth up to £20.00.
  19. I wouldn't imagine it has a value over the silver value. Those kinds of modern novelty coins seldom do. It's not British though as the Royal Mint have never made 1kg coins as far as I know. Is it state issued from another mint or is it privately produced?
  20. Just £1 or so as scrap silver, unless you can find anyone that seriously collects Indian coins that have been engraved - and I suspect collectors of such are few and far between.
  21. 6 Euros is just over face value, so I'd pay EUR5.00 each, in fact I'd probably rather pay less than that! But you'd have to cover postage this time. The 1994 Seychelles 25 Rupee would interest me about as much as tooth removal with root canal complications.
  22. Should be a 2009 (or 2010) edition later in the year. Won't be for a while though. The current one is good but doesn't include the new design coinage.
  23. A pound!! I've scrapped better copper tokens than that! The condition is absolutely dire, but at least you now know what it is.
  24. From experience having a 'Martini' set and selling it etc, and also having a normal 1983 BU set I can speak from experience.... The Martini set is exactly the same as the 1983 normal BU set. The only difference is that the Martini set includes a loose leaflet with it with the Martini logo and address etc (from memory). The actual set is exactly the same as the Normal BU 1983 year set with the Tower of London on the front (from memory again). The Heniz set (I've still got it....was offered £600!) is packed entirely differently, with the Heinz logo splashed all over it etc.
  25. No, nor have I! It may not really be that significant what the packaging around the coin itself is, but someone somewhere will want it. It is a lot of money, but where can you find another one?
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