Coinery Posted December 21, 2014 Posted December 21, 2014 A lovely coin, but very surprised to find this a CGS AU, especially when looking at the reverse.http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/A-UNC-1754-Farthing-CGS-UK-graded-and-encapsulated-CGS70/151520721813?_trksid=p5411.c100167.m2940&_trkparms=aid%3D222007%26algo%3DSIC.MBE%26ao%3D1%26asc%3D20140131123730%26meid%3Db163a1f0eab446b8bc5452b3a4156c3b%26pid%3D100167%26prg%3D20140131123730%26rk%3D2%26rkt%3D15%26sd%3D231416917447 Quote
Michael-Roo Posted December 21, 2014 Posted December 21, 2014 The reverse certainly looks to have wear on the high points, doesn't it. Nice obverse though. Quote
Rob Posted December 21, 2014 Posted December 21, 2014 For what it's worth, here's mine. My reverse also shows lack of detail/die fill on Britannia's head, but the rest looks markedly better. Quote
Coinery Posted December 21, 2014 Author Posted December 21, 2014 For what it's worth, here's mine. My reverse also shows lack of detail/die fill on Britannia's head, but the rest looks markedly better.Infinitely better, I'd say! Quote
Rob Posted December 21, 2014 Posted December 21, 2014 For what it's worth, here's mine. My reverse also shows lack of detail/die fill on Britannia's head, but the rest looks markedly better.Infinitely better, I'd say!Not perfect though by a long stretch. These dies tend to appear in a fairly knackered state with either a load of rust spots or die fill. They must have been used to destruction, but at some point were new, so someone should have an example of what they are supposed to look like.It's quite possible that the force used in striking was insufficient to fill the die, as a lot of the halfpennies are very weak on Britannia's head and in the laurel area of G2. I think in this series you will need a full lustre example in hand to determine whether the cause for weakness is strike or a filled die unless the weakness is out of proportion to the rest of the design. Quote
sound Posted December 21, 2014 Posted December 21, 2014 (edited) For what it's worth, here's mine. My reverse also shows lack of detail/die fill on Britannia's head, but the rest looks markedly better.Infinitely better, I'd say!Not perfect though by a long stretch. These dies tend to appear in a fairly knackered state with either a load of rust spots or die fill. They must have been used to destruction, but at some point were new, so someone should have an example of what they are supposed to look like.It's quite possible that the force used in striking was insufficient to fill the die, as a lot of the halfpennies are very weak on Britannia's head and in the laurel area of G2. I think in this series you will need a full lustre example in hand to determine whether the cause for weakness is strike or a filled die unless the weakness is out of proportion to the rest of the design.True, however the coin that started this thread does look over graded at AU or CGS 70.Not for the first time that you will find errors in what is supposedly a superior form of grading. Of course inconsistencies can be found everywhere, but if you set yourself up, well the omissions are that much more glaring.Mark Edited December 21, 2014 by sound Quote
azda Posted December 21, 2014 Posted December 21, 2014 Ahhhhh the sharkster. He was found to be a little dishonest with his "private bidding" and subsequently changed to BINs when questioned about 1 person bidding on 20 of his items. Just saying Quote
Paulus Posted December 21, 2014 Posted December 21, 2014 Ahhhhh the sharkster. He was found to be a little dishonest with his "private bidding" and subsequently changed to BINs when questioned about 1 person bidding on 20 of his items. Just sayingAt least it's not possible to shill BINs .... is it???? Quote
Peckris Posted December 22, 2014 Posted December 22, 2014 For what it's worth, here's mine. My reverse also shows lack of detail/die fill on Britannia's head, but the rest looks markedly better.Infinitely better, I'd say!Not perfect though by a long stretch. These dies tend to appear in a fairly knackered state with either a load of rust spots or die fill. They must have been used to destruction, but at some point were new, so someone should have an example of what they are supposed to look like.It's quite possible that the force used in striking was insufficient to fill the die, as a lot of the halfpennies are very weak on Britannia's head and in the laurel area of G2. I think in this series you will need a full lustre example in hand to determine whether the cause for weakness is strike or a filled die unless the weakness is out of proportion to the rest of the design.Yes, I'd say so too. There are weaknesses both sides of the CGS example. But as Rob says, the dies were used to destruction: 1754 copper, and 1758 shillings, were minted long after, probably well into Geo III reign. Quote
Colin G. Posted December 22, 2014 Posted December 22, 2014 Not the best photos, but my example is fully struck up on the Reverse, although has metal flow issues Quote
Coinery Posted December 22, 2014 Author Posted December 22, 2014 Not the best photos, but my example is fully struck up on the Reverse, although has metal flow issuesWhat did CGS give that one? Very nice! Quote
Peckris Posted December 22, 2014 Posted December 22, 2014 Not the best photos, but my example is fully struck up on the Reverse, although has metal flow issuesNice. Quote
Rob Posted December 22, 2014 Posted December 22, 2014 Not the best photos, but my example is fully struck up on the Reverse, although has metal flow issuesNice.It's good that we all see the faults in our coins, as it allows us to be objective rather than thinking the sun shines out of our collecting ar*es. Quote
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