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The British Coin Forum - Predecimal.com

Rob

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Everything posted by Rob

  1. Went for 1300 hammer. I was having difficulty justifying spending more than 1500 on it given it isn't better than good fine, even if the coin is unique. I was against a telephone bidder.
  2. I won a few lots, but had to let the one I really wanted go when the price got a bit high. Doubtless I'll be proved wrong for stopping in the future. It may have gone to a forum member. This is the coin I wanted, having been on the list ever since I knew where it was. It went through the Circular at £350 in Sept 1998. Worcester 3d obverse paired with a 2d reverse.
  3. The A is more likely the crossbar. We are still in the period when the V punch covered both V & A, with the crossbar added when required.
  4. I'm not sure evolution works that quickly, more a case of them not being interested in old gits like you and me (with our expectations massaged down accordingly).
  5. Just as a magnet moving in a coil will produce electricity (called a power station) and current will flow, so an electrical discharge (current flow) will induce magnetism in a ferrous object. It works both ways.
  6. For the Chinese. Material cost 5c, selling price a few dollars. You don't have to sell too many to recoup the setting up costs. For the dodgy dealer. Cost a few dollars, selling price tens of dollars. Seems like a good plan as long as you don't burden yourself with a moral compass. For many ebay buyers, an outlay of a few tens of dollars will easily be offset by the hundreds of dollars accruing from the sales of said rare items - all old coins are incredibly rare and are valuable. After all, they were missed by Gouby, Peck and Freeman
  7. Yes, the resolution is set too low. Needs more pixels. Actual rather than imagined evidence is far more convincing.
  8. I don't have an issue paying for work done, but think the threshold for paying import charges should be raised so that the RM would need to check fewer things, and to the end user the charge would seem less egregious being a smaller percentage of the total. The fixed charge on top of a couple pounds import VAT is disproportionately large, but on a couple hundred is neither here nor there.
  9. Is it silver plated? What is the weight? If it is in 'white metal', which is essentially mostly tin, the weight will be 15-20% less than that of a normal bronze piece assuming dimensions are the same.
  10. Looks like crud. There's enough of it everywhere else.
  11. The die axis on a hammered coin can be anything from 0-360 degrees.
  12. It's ok saying synchronise Chrome with Google and Firefox etc, but where does it store the bookmark info? The safest way to protect info surely has to be when you do it yourself? If I let Google save it, they will just spam me with crap related to my deposited data, just like any other digital company that gets its revenue from advertising. No.1 has already changed the email account to gmail and changed the internet explorer program to Chrome from Firefox, but will have to ask if they are linked when he is back on shore as I don't have any control over these things.
  13. Good news! I just had number 4 here on a surprise visit and he has restored the old bookmarks by somehow resurrecting the old ones used with Firefox before the update - hooray! Downside though is that I can't log into the wife's eBay. It thinks she is logging in but won't recognise her password. Bring back Windows 7 with its cookie clearing facility so I can start with a clean sheet. I'm losing the will to live.
  14. I have always put haymarking down to insufficiently mixed copper to make the alloy, this being the usual admix to obtain the required purity. The melting point of copper is about 100 degrees C higher than that of silver, so it is not enough just to melt the silver, throw in the requisite amount of copper and expect the alloy to be thoroughly mixed because the temperature isn't necessarily high enough. Whilst I have no definitive proof that this is the reason for the black spots, it is probably significant that there is far less haymarking seen on gold coins which can be explained by the fact that the two metals are only 20 degrees apart in their melting points. Copper (II) oxide is black. If it was due to a process other than mixing metals such as the treatment of blank flans, I would have expected to see similar percentages of coins with haymarking irrespective of the metal.
  15. Excellent, the internet will presumably have also thrown up a lot of talk about copies of Caesar's elephant. There's a touch of Nelson about this excuse.
  16. It is the same handwriting both sides and is a Boyd ticket. The GHG signifies that the coins came from Boyd's maternal uncle, George Henry Gaviller and were probably inherited on his death in 1880. Further reading can be had in the extensive foreword to the Boyd catalogue. The price code is made from a mixture of archaic Greek and Runes. This presumably was Boyd assigning a value to his coins.
  17. It means the positions of the two shields in question are reversed. e.g. This is my York 1697 first bust shilling with the French and Irish shields the wrong way round. Normally for William III coins the English arms divide the date and going clockwise is followed by the Scottish, French and Irish shields. In this instance the Irish shield is opposite the English shield, but furthermore, it also tells us something about the person who set the dies in the coining press as the only arms in the correct place are the French, these normally sitting behind the base of the obverse. All the other three are in the wrong place with the die axis 90 degrees out, so we can deduce that the dies were aligned in the press using the French ones as the guide relative to the obverse. A seriously rare variety, with the only other example believed extant being the ex Parsons and Jackson Kent specimen in VF.
  18. Halse, A 29mm diameter pale yellow written in ink on one side only.
  19. Thanks. As ever with computers, if you don't know the exact name, filename, or whatever, you're screwed. If I search for 'This PC' it goes straight there. Now all they have to do is communicate the differences to stop illiterates like me asking stupid simple questions. Or better still leave names unchanged.
  20. Ok, so I have Chrome. It still doesn't overcome the problem of not having 'My Computer', which I used previously as it was possible to drill down through the level and find files, whilst conveniently telling you what was a hard drive, removable or whatever. Basically, I knew where I was. Removing that ability was frankly unhelpful and I wish I could go back a version or two. First I need to be able to find the external hard drive, then somehow extract the bookmarks from the backed up data. Clues please.
  21. The copper ESC1383 (same dies as the ESC1382 above) that I kept is a better coin than either of the two silver pieces shown, so getting rid of these two silver pieces was the logical move. I just didn't anticipate the difficulty replacing the ESC1380 with something other than the dies seen on the ESC1382 above.
  22. I'm backed up onto a separate hard drive. Unfortunately I had my system updated to Windows 10 at Christmas, so no longer have 'my computer' at my disposal to look for files. I'm not sure where the drive is now other than C being the hard drive. The browser symbol is a wheel coloured red, green, yellow and a blue centre (Google?) - no idea what it is called.
  23. That's one I regret. I had the reverse duplicated with a copper 1383, so was hoping to find the same obverse with a different reverse. Just never happened.
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