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Everything posted by Rob
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Mid-December Spink Auction now Online
Rob replied to Coppers's topic in British Coin Related Discussions & Enquiries
Yes, the only things that are very attractive are equally unaffordable. Unfortunately the dragon mark is one of those gaps that is unlikely ever to be filled. -
Uh, halve that number or less. Crown closed on 14/2/1636. Tun was operative from then until it was pyxed on 8/5/1638. Charles raised his standard at Nottingham on 22nd August 1642 - the date which is usually accepted as the outbreak of war. I've just noticed that the date given in Brooker (SCBI33) for the pyx trial is not stated as being OS or NS. Based on the mintages for gold and silver, Bell lasted 1 year, and roughly 90% more in both metals was struck during Crown, so I assume it was OS and therefore a 20 month striking period. For the duration of Tun, gold was struck at approximately the same rate as previously (approx. £100 or so in the pyx), but the quantity of silver ballooned to 2.5x the rate seen for the two previous marks - this presuambly a reflection of Thomas Bushell's mines near Aberystwyth coming into production and the subsequent coining at Aberystwyth in addition to the Tower.
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He does say any questions welcome. High on the list would be why he doesn't submit himself to one of the TPGs and get himself certified...............
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Now the groat has dropped. Nicholas and I are talking about Edward 1, not Elizabeth 1. When he said E1, I automatically knew what he was talking about and didn't even stop to consider E1 as they are quite common and not so desirable. You're too Tudor-centric Stuart.
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I can't recall ever seeing an ex-mount groat?That seems a lowly dream coin for your usual quality taste in coins? Most of them have been gilded or mounted in the past. VF is a high enough aspiration.
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The Edward VIII sovereign from earlier this year? £516,000 all in. The Edward VIII was lot 949 in Tokyo. That made Y29m hammer.
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Plus premium, but I don't know what percentage it was. The figure of £336K all in rings a bell though - so presumably 10%.
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The Gothic was Y44m and the 1935 crown Y3m. You will have to work it out in £. The date was 22/11/2008 at the 20th Ginza sale in Tokyo.
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From the same sale.
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Very nice Rob! One you have a special interest in perhaps? No, I've already got an HC. It was just one I picked off the page at random.
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There you go, just for you - Morrieson 555
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There is a pair of them in existence. One in the BM and the other doing the rounds.
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Do you need any lot info? I am using all four as we write.
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Token 2015- Coin Yearbook
Rob replied to sound's topic in British Coin Related Discussions & Enquiries
£2K. Who's been looking at bidding in London Coins next sale then? -
I knew I had a picture of it somewhere. Enjoy.
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Simon Monks does a lot of tokens as does John Newman.
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Surely they tone nicely because they normally sit in a felt lined box for years. That's mutually exclusive to circulating.
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No way of telling once it has done the rounds for a bit unless it retains its original brilliance. If part of a set you can see if a currency piece has been added to rebuild the set by comparing the surfaces, but as a stand alone item you are on a hiding to nothing. Maundy threepences are the most likely item to be missing from a set due to the denomination also being a currency issue.
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If you mouse over his 5th picture, you can make out the name Hearn!! And presumably he knows because that word has been erased whereas the others are reasonably intact.
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Half penny William III ?
Rob replied to Tomo73's topic in British Coin Related Discussions & Enquiries
The wife was going to see someone and her journey was not too far out of the way, so she dropped it off as she was sort of passing. Better than waiting until Wednesday to receive it.- 24 replies
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- 1698
- half penny
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Did you read the item description in the listing? Not only optimistic but borderline rude too! Is it rude to say people who don't want to spend anything are not welcome? Over the years I have seen/received a lot of derisory offers that were well below intrinsic value, let alone their price as a collectible. OK, in this instance the price is just plain silly, but I can see where he's coming from. In this case, yes it is. I refer to the words used, not the intended meaning. Ok, maybe he shouldn't discriminate and only refer to poorer bidders, but the idea of sticking two fingers up to time wasters is one that most ebay sellers can sympathise with. A person submitting a bid of £1 for a sovereign in the hope that the seller hits the accept button instead of the decline one isn't likely to be welcomed with open arms.
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This is still spending $200 for $95 worth of work. Please, I implore you, send the $105 you have no need for or wish to pee against the wall to me, and I will spend it on something where you actually receive a benefit or goods for the expenditure.
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Did you read the item description in the listing? Not only optimistic but borderline rude too! Is it rude to say people who don't want to spend anything are not welcome? Over the years I have seen/received a lot of derisory offers that were well below intrinsic value, let alone their price as a collectible. OK, in this instance the price is just plain silly, but I can see where he's coming from.
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I fail to see why paying someone $249 to grade 5 coins that would normally cost $35 each, i.e $175 in total, is any better off than paying $200 to grade 5 coins that would otherwise cost $95. The first is a smaller overpayment, but still an overpayment, and certainly a larger outlay depite the lower overspend. Surely, if desperate to spend money for nothing there must have been a pyramid scheme closer to home you could have used - or you could play the lottery? It's little wonder you get grade inflation given the incentive to grade higher from the higher fees charged as a consequence of the higher 'official' value. You also run the risk of having coins undergraded as you have only paid to have them graded up to a certain value (for which read grade). It actually goes some way to justifying the use of a third party to grade the graders.
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Early Milled Provincial Mintages
Rob replied to arthurcrown's topic in British Coin Related Discussions & Enquiries
I've still got half a dozen or more questions waiting for a reply - tomorrow never comes. Basically you might get a reply if it doesn't involve them doing any research, otherwise, forget it.