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Rob

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Posts posted by Rob


  1. Has anyone got a copy of Roddy's FPL for Spring 2002, and if so please could you tell me if no.53 is the same coin as the attached? Or alternatively, DNW 68 lot 320, 12/12/2005 will do for comparison? If not the same coin, please PM me an image. TIA.

    CHST HIB-Noble 686.jpg

     

    And also a copy of Sovereign for November 2000. An image of item 097 is required. Another CHST below, which according to Bull is very small, so could be this one.

    737130239_CHSTHIR-SNCMar1977no_2284.jpg.ad7a41826fb151ec7da12bd15421c867.jpg

    Or this one

    927098016_CHSTHIB-SandB52E37.jpg.7cefad249a32ac36430aaf6ade1832dd.jpg

    Or this one

    739278186_CHSTHIB-SNCJune88-3605.jpg.f77e8d027ebd96b91aff49edb40fa211.jpg


  2. 2 hours ago, copper123 said:

    Does anyone know what the metal  is coating the "Silver" coins that Lauer produced my best bet is aluminium but I dont know if anyone has looked into it - I am pretty sure its not a thin coat of silver .

    Rogers book would probably tell me but I don't have a copy....

     

    5 minutes ago, DrLarry said:

    I have only had a very brief glimpse at Rogers and so far cannot see much reference to materials .  I will ask Gunter and Thomas they may have looked into it .  It is an interesting question 

    Depends on when they were made. Prior to 1883, aluminium was not commercially available and effectively a precious metal given the cost of extraction and refining. I'd say nickel or tin were more likely in this instance. Tin plating is surely the cheapest method.

    • Like 1

  3. 1 hour ago, Sword said:

    The username is no longer registered on eBay.

    Hopefully, we won't hear more stories about 1933 pennies found in clocks , chimneys, charity shops, late relatives' accumulations etc for at least a little while.

    Panic not. I've just found a 1933 penny in a pile of sh*te just acquired. Normal service will be resumed shortly. :ph34r:

    • Haha 3

  4. 3 hours ago, PWA 1967 said:

    NGC get plenty wrong ,some more so than others.

    The coin label has now been changed and the coin not mine ,imagine getting this back 😂

     

    339585497_530309969278390_5045683944751527382_n.jpg

    Don't throw good money after bad. Crack it out and move on. And treat the TPG as the sh*tshow it manifestly is. Don't reward them for getting it wrong

    • Like 2

  5. So what happens on Facebook when you are discussing Negro's Head marked coins? Anyone young and brought up in today's PC world might acquire a ticket with NH in the future and not be able to ask the question and get an answer to what it means without being blocked. 

    People need to stop being offended on behalf of others, who, if they have half a brain will recognise that the offence is caused by context, and not just the use of any particular word(s).

    Science is going to suffer too. Stefan's Law will have to be explained in some other way, so good luck with that one.


  6. 1 hour ago, 1949threepence said:

    Indeed, that's another variation of the same thing. You can't use a phrase like that descriptively. 



     

    If you went to a restaurant and got refused entry, you wouldn't go back a second time. So why use Facebook if it is policed by a robot you can't discuss problems with?  The internet is littered with 'Scunthorpe' problems and analogues thereof. 

    • Like 1

  7. On the basis that every dog has its day, choose anything relatively unpopular. Silver threepences, maundy, halfpennies, farthings or anything small. Larger things are always popular because they are easier for people with bad eyesight to see. Two that are unlikely to become popular are quarter guineas and double florins (milled only) given there are only 3 and 13 varieties to complete a collection respectively.

    • Like 1

  8. 3 hours ago, evansuk2000 said:

    I love these coins and want to collect as many as possible. What do you guys think of this example? Any issues? Potential NGC grade? I know it's a lot to ask, so maybe just opinions on it's appearance.

    1935 proof.jpg

    Not sure why you would want to get as many as possible - anyway, 1 down, 2499 to go. Bon chance.

    As for this one, it was graded nFDC this time, and aFDC in the previous sale catalogue in 2011, which is likely just the preference of different cataloguers, but essentially says it's not quite there. NGC grade? Anything from details to PF71 - I wouldn't even try to second guess the outcome, and unless you want to sell it in the US, why bother? It has cost you just over £800 today plus shipping, to which you will have to add grading and shipping costs to and from the TPG and still run the risk of disappointment. You don't get a refund for an unfavourable opinion.

    So you are looking at a final cost around this year's book price for FDC when consensus is it definitely isn't.


  9. 12 hours ago, ozjohn said:

    *MINT* PF63, 1911 King George V Silver PROOF Coronation Florin / 2 Shilling, NGC | eBay The coin's not too bad but GBP 70 plus 10% GST to send it to Australia. That's why I like to buy directly from a dealer as you do not pay Australian GST up to $1000 coin value and you can negotiate on the freight.

    Shipping cost is a tricky one for the vendor. Up to £250 is not a problem because it comes within the affordable table of charges for the regular mail. Go over that and you are looking at insured parcels which will typically cost £40+ as a minimum whether you use the postal service or a courier, leaving you with the choice to either lie on the customs form and not be insured for full value, or declare its full value with the attendant costs. If I'm shipping across the world to someone I have never dealt with before, I know which option I will offer.

    In the case of the above, surely it is easier for you to be invoiced for a shipping included value from the seller directly rather than through ebay's system, which is clunky at best, often collects tax on behalf of the destination country, but frequently charges the wrong duty rates (e.g. see Jerry's dealing with ebay/HMRC and I was once charged 20% vat on a book!). A shipping included amount would save the 10% GST, but there is no obvious way to avoid the heavy shipping costs other than by under-declaring the value.


  10. 2 hours ago, DrLarry said:

    gggg

    yes but two IIII pences seem to have been soldered together to give the weight it weighs twice the weight of one 4 pence 

    Not convinced about that. The nominal weight of a groat is 2.0g. Can we be sure it isn't one of those casts of genuine pieces that were done as two halves and joined to make the whole coin. A seam down the middle of the edge could be gilded to cover up the work. Making casts of small change is fraught with difficulty due to the minimal thickness of the flans, so consequently tend to be thicker than normal, which would account for the additional weight (along with the gold). 3.4g with additional gold is way too light for 2x4d.

    • Like 1

  11. 18 minutes ago, Martinminerva said:

    Yep - that's a 9+K.  I was watching this too, but the seller kept "ending" then re-listing it! Good show too on the 8+I - that's a very rare die pairing in  my experience, rarer I feel than Freeman states.

    Likely nothing suspicious. When you have a reduced listing fee weekend, you take down the most expensive items, or those with only a day or two to go, and then relist to keep the fees down. Can save a fortune.

    • Like 1

  12. Do not cease hostilities or cede an inch to Russia as it would give them a breathing space. Your perceived weakness will result in them resuming their expansion when they have had time to regroup. They need to be forced out and the west needs to support them in this. By all means set up a demilitarised zone once ejected which could be run by the UN if necessary, but do not give them a territorial gain as a reward for invading.

    A wide enough buffer zone would give them something that potentially removes any NATO troops from the Ukrainian border, and also means that Russia couldn't sit on Ukraine's border, waiting to invade. Russia would likely never accept this as it would interfere with their centuries old habit of invading their neighbours. It's what they do best. Russia has killed many millions of Ukrainians in the past simply for being Ukrainian and would do so again given they look down on anybody from outside of Moscow/St. Petersburg. Do not encourage them in doing a rerun by handing over people who don't want to be part of Russia. 

    When Russia is taking children as 'orphans' and resettling them by adoption with Russian families, it isn't because many of them didn't have parents. Russia's biggest problem is demographics, and continuing the conflict is exacerbating this. Every generation they have a cull of young males due entirely to their empire building. Maybe only 15000 in Afghanistan over 10 years, but Ukraine with 10x that number to date has set them back at least a generation in development. Russia is a cancer on humanity and hopefully will implode and break up at the end of all this.

    • Like 2

  13. 40 minutes ago, VickySilver said:

    How about one of the major driving forces behind this "pop top" business? Registry sets! Yikes.

    The TPGs rate people's submitted sets but note that all coins must be from that TPG and no others included. I probably let my pride get the better of me, but thrice with regards to sixpences and shillings (Victoria and George V) and Victoria half sovereigns, I suggested to each poster on one of the chat rooms that possibly I might blow their set(s) out of the water but chose not to party at their end of the pool & of course they took exception. I guess my real point is that there are many coins that are not slabbed or not entered into registry set competition.

    Like the guy who took exception when I suggested they were collecting opinions. Was it MS65 1967 pennies? Whatever, really rare because only a handful had been slabbed in such exalted grade. Thus proving that most people still retain their marbles.

    • Like 3
    • Haha 1

  14. Portrait is fairly flat, which is typical. Is there any trace of solder from a suspension mount on either side or the edge? Spink ticket and price suggests it will probably be in the Circular, but when? I'd have to plough through them to find out.

    I can't see any case for it being a touchpiece, as these were typically angels - the combination of saint and king provided the cure and/or protection . The milled Charles II touchpieces were produced later than this coin

    FWIW, this is my 3rd issue shilling. Again, flat in parts, though the portrait is above average.

    c1594-Chas.2 3rd hammered shilling - Copy.jpg

    • Like 4
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