copper123 Posted November 17, 2014 Posted November 17, 2014 221600783858Seller assumes all responsibility for this listing. Quote
Gary Posted November 17, 2014 Posted November 17, 2014 I think what he means is that it is an 1859 Farthing not 1839! Although in that condition it does not make much difference Quote
scott Posted November 17, 2014 Posted November 17, 2014 how is it an expensive mistake? wasn't a BIN, then it would be. Quote
Rob Posted November 17, 2014 Posted November 17, 2014 OK, so the value is not zero as there is an intrinsic metal value currently standing at 0.43p spot, but a waste of £1.99 is not too far wide of the mark. The seller can be forgiven for not reading the date correctly. In fine they only book at £5 and £12 respectively, so extrapolating back to an appropriate grade, the cost/value question is still a moot point. Certainly not an expensive mistake by the seller. Had it been in unc or thereabout it would have been an expensive mistake, but then the seller would have been able to read the date with ease. Quote
copper123 Posted November 17, 2014 Author Posted November 17, 2014 (edited) I must admit i have sold similar or worse examples for £20 - £25 they really sell well in any grade.Roughly six coins which is aprox one a month have found there way on to ebay in the recent past the only one as a buy it now sold straight away.In fact it is nearly as rare as 1844 in my opinionContrast this to the number of 1853 farthings currently on ebay and you will see it is a lot scarcer than normally emagined.1851 and 1852 are also rarer than most folks think Edited November 17, 2014 by copper123 Quote
Rob Posted November 18, 2014 Posted November 18, 2014 I must admit i have sold similar or worse examples for £20 - £25 they really sell well in any grade.Roughly six coins which is aprox one a month have found there way on to ebay in the recent past the only one as a buy it now sold straight away.In fact it is nearly as rare as 1844 in my opinionContrast this to the number of 1853 farthings currently on ebay and you will see it is a lot scarcer than normally emagined.1851 and 1852 are also rarer than most folks thinkYes, but it is still a fairly dire example. Less than fine for something that is reasonably obtainable can only be rationalised by assuming the buyer wishes to maintain uniformity of grade. I can accept that they might not want to spend hundreds on an unc or EF example, but if you are going to waste £20-30 on a washer, why not spend the same on a VF coin with an unambiguous date from anywhere other than eBay? This has all the hallmarks of planet eBay living in a parallel universe. If anyone wants expensive washers, I have a huge supply. Quote
copper123 Posted November 18, 2014 Author Posted November 18, 2014 Yes scott for some reason there seems to be a shortage of 1859 farthings in lower grade maybe it has something to do with it being the last date made b4 the scraping of the copper coins was decided. Quote
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