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Everything posted by Rob
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Help for the digitally challenged please
Rob replied to Rob's topic in Nothing whatsoever to do with coins area!
I'm not sure that it won't be considered a filezilla problem. Anyway, I'll take your advice and see if they provide help for people who will need a translation service. Thanks chaps. -
Help for the digitally challenged please
Rob replied to Rob's topic in Nothing whatsoever to do with coins area!
No good. ftp looks a distinct possibility though, as when combined with 1and1help.com the server refused access with the error message ECONNREFUSED. Something must have been recognised. using 1and1.com without the help timed out -
Help for the digitally challenged please
Rob replied to Rob's topic in Nothing whatsoever to do with coins area!
Does anyone on here use filezilla or is familiar with it? I had to have my system rebuilt just before Christmas and unfortunately the shortcut which logged me into the 1&1 host for the uploading files to the website no longer works. The help files are gibberish to me. FYI I tried putting in the quick connect boxes the host I've tried 1and1.co.uk with and without www. before it - but gives the error message can't find server and times out. I've used the username and password which previously applied. Sorry, but I've spent a day or so on this and all roads lead to a brick wall. The home help is currently sitting in a boat off the Shetlands. -
It was ever the same. I didn't know where mortgage rates were going when I had one. I just made sure that it was never too large with a huge safety margin. House and other asset prices ought/have to fall. Claims that it is different this time are nonsense - they never are in the final call. Reversion to the mean says they have to adjust to an affordable multiple of income for the masses. Prices are buoyed by all the buy to let landlords who get returns considerably in excess of what's on offer for deposits, which in turn are held down by artificially low interest rates. Nothing will happen until interest rates return to sensible commercial levels. So all this QE has gone into assets and their inflated prices rather than kickstarting the economy. The economy will look after itself if the potential rewards are great enough, because you will always find someone willing to try under the right conditions, but the 'free' money issued in the past 6 years has ensured that no risky long term ventures needed to be contemplated.
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The winning bidder had a feedback of 604! Hardly a novice to ebay, though one might question their numismatic knowledge.
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I concur that it is always difficult to define what constitutes a variety. I think you have to consider each feature as a stand-alone and assess it in the context of the day. Hammered and milled clearly operate under different sets of rules. Milled coins being struck using dies that have been produced from a multi-stage process involving matrices and master punches are always going to be different to hammered coins where the details are hand-cut on the end of a piece of die stock by a man who may have had his own set of punches, each set being different from the next man's. Away from the main centres, a single moneyer was often the norm in Saxon times. In the Civil War period, some engravers had to follow the troops around because they needed the ability to coin in various locations. The wholesale reworking of old dies was the norm before milled coins, but since then the ability to produce a consistent product has resulted in dies of the same design being used for many years with only a date change required for the most part. I think we all agree there is no right or wrong definition, but this is in part due to the fact that we don't have all the facts. It is also driven by the collector's desire to have more boxes to tick. Various people have written articles categorising coins of a type of reign down the years, but very few have been able to tie in the stop arrangements or punches to certain individuals or events. As I have shown elsewhere, I can do that for a couple engraver on Civil War coinage but most coins defy analysis at present. As hammered dies were rubbed down and re-engraved (by hand), it is illogical to treat traces of the former legend as varieties, nor can the placement of letters be of any importance. With milled coinage, the latter would be significant because of the way in which dies were/are produced.
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A lot of the estimates were too high and unsurprisingly quite a few lots passed. I was looking at the P924, but this sold for 3600 hammer. Clearly that was due to the number on the slab as it was graded 65 by NGC. 3 years ago when it went through CNG it was in a NGC 63 slab and it sold for 2300. Previous to that it had been through Heritage. This piece wasn't a patch on the nice one that CNG sold just over a year ago, so obviously the 2 grade hike worked wonders for someone. With regard to question of auctions resembling a fixed price sale, this was noted before when discussing a recent Baldwin offering. I think the estimates are a reflection of the efforts the auction houses are having to put in to attract custom. Yes they have a lot of material, but the perennial shortage of quality persists. If they are offering 105% of hammer to some people, that has to be reflected in the reserves which have to be effectively fully valued. There are too many people chasing too few quality pieces and too many auction houses offering too many lots that people don't really want, but losses aren't crystalised until a sale takes place. So the seller protects their investment by ensuring no loss takes place by using a high reserve. This in turn puts people off bidding because they subconsciously want a bargain, irrespective of whether a bid at the reserve level is a reasonable price to pay. It's probably all part of the wheels gradually coming off the bus. Too many people are in for too much money, reflected in the prices paid for the not quite there pieces rather than the best knowns. With unrealistically low interest rates available to borrowers, it will be interesting to see what happens when they once again exceed inflation, which is where one would expect them to be.
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Although books can be very expensive, the average collector doesn't need them until a decision is made to concentrate on a specific field and to dig deeper into the topic. By that time they are usually spending a reasonable amount on the collection and so the cost of literature relative to that of the collection drops significantly. For your basic references, the cost will rarely exceed £20-30 whatever the country concerned as these will be aimed at the casual collector - many will be considerably less. If you decide to specialise, a set of books for the next level up will rarely be over £100. At this point is actually isn't that big a relative expense compared to the information at your disposal, and if you decide to relinquish collecting a specific field, you can always sell them as you aren't likely to be the only collector who needed books. Reference material tends be superseded by volumes containing more information. The basic info contained in old volumes is still relevant with few exceptions.
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2x2 flips are ok as long as the material used for the window is mylar. Long term storage in pvc is not good as the plasticiser leaches out leaving a sticky residue and in addition reacts with copper based coins to leave a green film (copper acetate?) on the coin. As this is usually dissolved or suspended in the plasticiser, it can usually be removed by dissolving the residue in an appropriate solvent, but the best thing is not to be in that position. Obviously it will adhere to the coin's surface because it isn't flat, so you will still have a green tinge to the colour unless you remove all the contaminant. People who spend more on their collections tend to look after their coins better, but for the typical casual collector of coins from circulation for example, long term storage is not always considered. For rummage bin material it isn't going to affect the already low value, but best not to get in the habit of storing coins incorrectly in the first place. Many collections are offered to me having been grandad's coins etc and they have often been stored for the past 40 years in sticky pvc holders, which are themselves contained in pvc pages. All in all it can get very messy.
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Can't help. Sorry.
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It's only one negative in nine ratings. Easily done if you have a buyer that got out of bed on the wrong side.
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They look like casting sprues, but could be the remnants of mount marks given the lack of clarity to the images.
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There wasn't anything wrong with the lightweight in my opinion as you can't have a well circulated coin without marks or scratches unless it has been polished flat. Nor is there a problem with the numerous Saxon coins that get rejected by the US TPGs for having peck marks. Nor is there a problem with the numerous Saxon coins that get accepted by the US TPGs despite having peck marks..........
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Yep. £250 max now. Which if you remember Dave, I said the shilling you had recently was either a silly amount, or 250 insured and cross your fingers.
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From where to where? Shipping overseas to some places is horribly expensive once the sum insured exceeds the royal mail max. If you have to ship something insured with a courier then most internationals would be starting at £30-40. Freight by lorry within the EU can be cheaper than Royal Mail however.
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When the 1869(?) penny in a previous thread was rejected for corrosion, the consensus was a roughened patch in the reverse field as the reason because the problems didn't exactly leap out at you. In this instance, the only bit that isn't corroded is the P of penny and the datal figures. 1869s are available in reasonable quantities, 1882 no H pennies aren't. I rest my case. Peter is going to have to start giving that Centisles bloke a bit of credit soon. At least his overgrading is consistent.
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Yes, but that merely helps to make the case for it being the lottery I think it is. On the whole I do believe they try to be consistent, but when the person looking at the coin and giving it a grade has a bad day, that decision stays with the coin until someone cracks it out. This is where the whole list of reasons for rejection needs to be rethought. At what point do they reject for scratches? Maybe anything shorter than a given length is ok because every coin that isn't as it left the mint will have them to some extent. I can think of several cases where I have rejected the coin in the slab on the grounds of the obvious verdigris present. I can't see why any coin should be rejected other than for being counterfeit or tooled. Wear is a fundamental part of the process; scratches are made as part of circulation. To reject for these reasons is illogical. Over time, a metal mix with high concentrations of copper will go green in a moist atmosphere, but still won't affect the level of wear which is what a grade purports to be - so why reject some and not others? Needless to say, you are the one with the difficult decision because they will happily assess a coin and freely give a rejection. I know that doesn't help you, but that is part of the whole 'experience'. The question of rejection criteria is somewhat nebulous and the undue deference paid to grade and grading organisation is on a par with the vacuousness of celebrity culture. Sorry, but that's just my view.
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That first one is especially nice! Oxford mint - wouldn't mint that for myself. Good, keeps you on the right side of the fence.
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Probably because rejection is not only a case of having the faults outlined on the label, it is also subject to the desirability test. A common penny would probably be rejected, but a rarity like an 1882 no H needs to be slabbed come what may, to fix a price for a slabbed item and act as an advertising feature. Look in the next Heritage sale and you will see a Briot milled halfcrown with a load of scratches around the shield. They didn't stop it being given a grade rather than rejected. The considerably lighter marks on the lightweight shilling I sold to Paulus ensured it was only given a details grade and rejected for scratches. Charles I shillings are not rare and available in higher grades, so they could afford to reject it. Had they bothered to weigh it, they could at least have attributed it correctly, but that isn't the name of the game. Briot milled pieces are considerably scarcer, aesthetically more imposing, and I suspect, treated more leniently as a result. All things in life are not equal. Even raised die polishing lines have been used as an excuse for rejection as scratched on some of the commoner milled pieces.
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It must happen occasionally, but I suspect that far more are lost due to their not having reached the desired price.
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This has been discussed before. http://www.predecimal.com/forum/topic/8777-lost-in-space/#entry103633 There are ways to apply a little pressure, and even if not ultimately successful you have have the pleasure of giving the guilty party an uncomfortable time. Some you win and some you lose, but unfortunately too many problem sellers are unwilling to accept the latter.
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Probably the same numpty who is paying 55p approx to dispose of it.
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If you take many types of coin you will often see more in museums than in private hands. e.g. the Langport I bought 3 months ago might be unique for now, but the mint is known for 60 or 70 coins. That there are only about 10 Langports in private hands is the number that affects the price collectors will pay. When I bought my Crewkerne, the catalogue mentioned the 29 known for the mint of which 17 were quatrefoils, but omitted to mention the considerably more important info that only a handful were available to collectors. Panic is only likely to be seen amongst some of those who do no research, but then, if they don't do research they are unlikely to know of the existence of a hoard. Chicken and egg. There are already thousands in institutions and similarly thousands in private hands. The 52000 Roman coins found near Frome were kept intact in a museum to name but one instance where the market was unaffected. It is reasonable to say that for the most part we already have a relative rarity index for type, mint or reign.
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Not likely in my view because the BM or local museum are likely to take the hoard leaving the net increase of available material at zero. There are too many vested interests and mutual back scratchers to let the public get any spoils.
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Like a tenner each? After all, there are thousands of them as this hoard proves, so not rare or desirable. They can make their case fairly easily for reducing the price paid. I too think the BM should only keep the things they don't have an example of. It would be a shame to have them locked away indefinitely from the public for viewing or the enthusiastic numismatist who would like to do the research the BM is unable to do due to lack of personnel. The problem is magnified by the provincial museums who also have a claim on finds, yet have even fewer resources to deal with hoards. Some museums don't even have a curator to look after the coins, so there is no chance of research/access/viewing of their collections.