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Rob

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Everything posted by Rob

  1. If the underlying digit has a longer more curved tail and the top is straight, it could be a 5/3 just as easily as a 5/5. The first would be interesting, the second not.
  2. It's worth a few pence scrap. I'll take it for that less the processing fee to separate out the two metal types.
  3. We need a bigger picture. Try using photobucket to upload large pictures, and make sure you crop to the size of the coin as being able to determine the quality of the work surface will not assist with the object in question. The abbreviation to HI instead of HIB occurs all through the hammered coinage and would be quite acceptable. The W&M halfcrowns have legends reading both FR and FRA within the same issue, so although HI is unusual, it is not necessarily a wrong-un. Weight is important, as is the ability to scrutinise detail. Also, what is the edge like? Pics of this might help too.
  4. The early milled (pre-Soho), which normally has an inverted die axis, is interesting if 90 degrees or 45 degrees out (or possibly 22.5). I haven't made my mind up whether the bit that located the die in the press had 4, 8 or even possibly 16 sides yet, though the latter is unlikely. Small, but sufficient numbers turn up with about a 45 degree error to ask the question. A York transposed arms shilling confirms the multiple of 4 theory, being 90 degrees out.
  5. It isn't a lily, it's an amaryllis. However, if the cat's name is Lily, then the flower isn't a felix either and still an amaryllis.
  6. I've noticed that all of these thing tend to come from 143040 wherever that is.
  7. C'mon Rob, my missus is much betterer than your's! http://static.guim.co.uk/sys-images/Observer/Pix/pictures/2012/1/30/1327938751037/les-dawson-ada-007.jpg I always felt attracted to Lesley Dawson.
  8. Thrupney bits now. There's inflation for you in more senses than one.
  9. Good grief, what a dog. My wife is much nicer. Here she is in all her finery. http://www.google.co.uk/imgres?start=53&num=10&hl=en&biw=1920&bih=934&addh=36&tbm=isch&tbnid=N5752Vv4_ixqkM:&imgrefurl=http://www.jackleblond.com/can-spam-everything-an-email-marketer-needs-to-know/&docid=16jdxo0jnWcbKM&imgurl=http://www.jackleblond.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/08/monty_python_spam2.jpg&w=360&h=254&ei=rcScUOCIN4iA0AXF2YHgCw&zoom=1&iact=rc&dur=476&sig=101038903173429132628&page=2&tbnh=134&tbnw=220&ndsp=60&ved=1t:429,r:56,s:53,i:80&tx=108&ty=83
  10. with eBay search in such a pickle it's an excellent time to be shopping! Bargains a-plenty. Not such a good time to be trying to flog stuff though... That makes so much sense! I've noticed a 50% tail-off for 2 weeks now, it's broke a consistent set of selling stats that have held up for nearly 2 years! Ebay topped 80,000 British worldwide last weekend. A wide search is far from easy at those numbers. It can only end in tears with sellers going away. And buyers who can't be a***d. It's 2 or 3 years since I spent much time looking. Every purchase now is something that I initially find within a few pages.
  11. AFAIK Rob, that you can do by putting in a " - " So a search for " Crowns -Churchill " will leave out any listing with the word "Churchill" in it. Add " -Wedding -Diana " to your search terms and you'll avoid even more offerings ... Thanks. That seems to work more or less as a search of crowns -churchill only gave one listing of a bulk lot of 10. Very useful. -sh*te would be even better.
  12. Correction: I've just run into the character limit that I was assured doesn't exist! It's 300 characters. The other thing that has been annoying me for a while is the change to a 10,000 search limit. Yesterday for instance I started in Coins British at about 5.00pm and only got back to about 9.30pm Friday evening so I missing about 4 hours of new listings. Does that 10000 limit include all ebay items or just coins? As the current total in the coins section is about 60000 British, there surely can't have been 10000 listings in just over 4 hours. Something doesn't add up there. Isn't the 300 character limit overkill as titles are limited to 80(?) letters if I remember right, so you can't use any more in any case? It would be better if the search results offered you the option to remove churchill crowns from a list of crown search results for example. You can exclude them by era unless someone has listed them in the wrong section, but then you can't legislate for all events.
  13. You will miss the neckless £2 Every cloud has a silver lining.
  14. I don't think it will affect me much. I only ever check the hammered or the reigns for a specific denomination or year. I haven't got the patience to plough through pages of Olympic 50p pieces to find the occasional rare Darwin £2.
  15. What are the wildcards you can or could use and where do you find them? I thought you had to type in what you were looking for - say 1723 sixpence, or went down the category tree and searched within the denomination or era. Will this render specific descriptions impossible to use. Say the wildcard was 'all', then 'all new' or 'all unc' wouldn't be allowed. Sorry, confused. Saved searches?
  16. Knowing that it has been repaired I would say so in any description. The coin was practically as struck with a large scratch/scuff to the cheek. Now it is practically as struck with a repaired scratch/scuff to the cheek. Ironically, it is probably one of the rare instances where a repair wouldn't matter as the coin is unique, or at least I'm 99.9999% certain it is. As it happens, I paid more for the one with a scratch than I did for a different variety without. In these circumstances it all boils down to whether you want the coin badly enough. The price you are prepared to pay is somewhat flexible as a result. My bone of contention is the indifference of the TPGs. A $20-30K coin brings in big fees, and it wouldn't be good to offend such a good customer by refusing to grade it.
  17. 'Gotten' is Old English and perfectly acceptable (and correct) usage to an American. I think it sounds nice. I've gone and gotten me a dictionary Yippee. A Jockinese to English translation service, specially adapted for the Ayephone.
  18. Like the five figures somebody in the US spent on the gold halfpenny I formerly owned. Just because the heavy gouge was repaired and smoothed over, it suddenly became eligible for slabbing as a Proof 64 Cameo by NGC as opposed to XXXX details, scratches/environmental damage or whatever reason they would give for refusing to grade. Or maybe they just turn a blind eye to certain favoured individuals if the repair job is good enough? I'm sure repair work goes on all the time, with the best jobs going undetected and the TPGs indifferent as long as the repair work isn't in your face. I saw a piece of hammered gold once with a ticket where the (barely detectable) adjustment to the ticket indicating the coin was pierced was more obvious than the plugging done to repair the coin. The catalogue description for the date on the ticket was immensely helpful here.
  19. I would think that for short runs of a few thousand, the time spent readying the equipment would nearly equal the time spent striking. Unless the coins are struck on an individual basis as orders demand (unlikely in the event of a few thousand), it would seem probable that a single run would suffice and so the numbers ought to be accurate as released to the public. The mint isn't going to produce 20 for Fred and 50 for Joe followed by a wait for the next order to materialise as the production run is likely to have been set long in advance with orders taken prior to production. There may be a slight discrepancy between numbers struck and the official mintage as I would expect them to produce sufficient numbers to cover the allotted mintage. i.e official total plus a few to cover any mistrikes. This would ensure only one striking period was required. Any excess can be returned to the pot. This would be the most cost effective method of producing proofs or commemorative issues.
  20. Unlikely. You had nearly three years of fine silver output at the end of Ed. VI when every attempt was made to restore the silver quality to the original standard. Just leave it and move on.
  21. I don't see anything that screams wrong, but I don't have a database of Mary groat dies to compare. The weight is light at 18% down but you can allow for some loss from the scrapes and wear - say 5%. The question therefore is what would the normal weight range be? The three examples in Brady were 1.91g, 2.12g & 2.12g, so on that statistically insignificant basis +/-5% ish around the theoretical 2.01g. If you aren't happy don't buy it. It doesn't have any redeeming features anyway, other than as a gap filler.
  22. The withdrawn one has this design Not many out there. That's probably to be expected because they appeared in the first release packaged issue and not the general issues to banks for circulation. A genuinely circulated example is probably very rare given most if not all of these will have been bought at above face value.
  23. If you alone have seen 2-3 then there must be MANY more than the "two known" which they claim! If the estimate is based on that spurious claim, then they are being a bit naughty. That's the catch/beauty of TPGs. Once you build credibility, then your word becomes gospel. It's in their interest to build a myth whereby they are the definitive arbitor of the total numbers extant. That's why the 1901 penny slabbed MS66 made $600. My example, which may or may not have made that grade or even exceeded it cost me £2.21. Do I care? All of these populations require a several decades long due diligence period. Find a rarity or a previously undiscovered variety and then suddenly the whole world has one.
  24. The withdrawn one has this design
  25. Why back to 1672 only? If you went there, it would surely make more sense to encompass all milled coinage. There is life outside of copper.
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