Test Jump to content
The British Coin Forum - Predecimal.com

Peckris 2

Coin Hoarder
  • Posts

    3,379
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    162

Everything posted by Peckris 2

  1. Good luck! That's the large blue book divided into three horizontal sections? I'm keeping mine…
  2. I didn’t even know there were two different designs on the 1992 20p?
  3. Noonan’s often refer to lots as “may have once been cleaned” which I assume is an arse-covering exercise. However, this coin does have a telltale sign of possible dipping just under Geo’s chin. But it doesn't look blatantly cleaned, I agree.
  4. The Geo V reverse ghosting is a fascinating topic. It’s rarely seen on halfcrowns which have a fairly deep and intricate reverse design, but often seen on pennies, halfpennies, sixpences, and shillings, all of which have a lot of blank space on the reverse designs. The first attempt to eliminate ghosting was on the ‘shallow portraits’ on 2/6 2/- and 1/- 1920-1926, and pennies 1922-1926, which partly succeeded, but not until the modified effigy 1925-26 was it nearly completely successful.
  5. I think you may well be right as the teeth also show signs of being displaced to the right - I think it’s properly called “die bounce”?
  6. my sisters had the cough from hell - hope it clears up soon
  7. Doesn't seem to affect the collectors of vinyl, cassettes, and now CDs ! The lack of an object in everyday use can actually spur collectors.
  8. I wouldn't go that far - the coins that you've used it on are as relatively scarce to each other as the index suggests. As far as general copper and bronze coins go, most people use Freeman / Peck / Gouby as reliable indicators of rarity. Spink’s catalogue’s values can be used as a vague indication of rarity but need to be taken with a huge pinch of salt, as popularity as well as scarcity affects values : for example, the 1902LT & 1912H pennies are nowhere near as scarce as their values suggest.
  9. I remember that @scott had a strong interest in these varieties at one time.
  10. I don't know this Numista rarity index at all, but from what I can see it appears that the higher the number, the rarer the item. I was initially thrown by the R7, because the grading scale used by ESC (for example) only goes up to 7 which means extremely rare. Freeman goes up to 20 which is ‘possibly unique’. With your (fairly standard) Charles II 4d rated R40, I deduce that index may go up to 100? ETA: just Googled, and indeed it goes up to 100, but they say it’s based on how many Numista members have the item and how often it is up for ‘swap’, so fairly esoteric, I'd say!
  11. Recut letters - a frequent occurrence on Victorian coppers and bronze.
  12. The engraver was Bertram McKennial not de Saulles. I wonder where you get the R7 from? Quite a nice coin, between F and VF for me.
  13. Anything's better than that.
  14. This is what happens when you've not noticed you did ‘Flip horizontal’
  15. Pictures of said coins would not only be appreciated, but are a must!
  16. Welcome to the forums You can always ask here for advice, especially about where to buy from, and what to get. What are your main interests?
  17. Creating those historic prices was a right bit of hard work! So I've only done it for coins in my collection, but luckily I've got all the relevant Seaby/Spinks for the years listed.
  18. I created my own database set of tables using FileMaker Pro - this is just four of the tables showing one of the coins:
  19. wouldn't be a joke in America where they pronounce it ‘booey’ not ‘boy’!
  20. there's a hammered forum here
  21. my best guess - and that's all it is - is that they might have been an attempt to try and resolve all the problems caused by conversion from large thick copper to smaller thin bronze. The sheer number of varieties that occur between 1860 and 1862 shows the scale of the issues they had, the repairs needed, and the huge number of dies involved.
  22. the 1806 is a halfpenny not penny - but quite common in that grade and not worth expensive treatment. if you didn't mind the resulting retoning (paler) you could immerse overnight in balsamic vinegar which would dissolve the verdigris into darker patches. not to be done on a more valuable coin of course
  23. if anything at all it might be a 6 … or a cud
×
×
  • Create New...
Test