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Everything posted by 1949threepence
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It's the extreme scarcity in high grade which marks them out as very collectable, Pete. In my opinion at least. As you said, Dave Craddock has seen only one UNC 1946 ONE ' in nearly 50 years. That tells you they're as rare as hen's teeth in that condition. Probably rarer.
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Interesting that unlike the 147, Freeman doesn't ascribe them a separate number but instead a footnote, which reads: "Some specimens have a small elongated raised dot in the field above the E of ONE caused probably by damage to the die". Hence the fact that as in Bob's two, there will be differences in the appearance, as the die damage built up.
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That's seriously scarce. By the way, thanks for the neat 1944, Pete. Arrived today.
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The one I initially bought turned out, on inspection, to be an F217. Just had a further scan of e bay and easily managed to buy good quality versions of F219 and 221 - within 5 minutes. Whereas earlier I waded through......well, lost count........of 1940 pennies on advanced search, and after finding they were all double exergue, eventually lost the will to live with any more searching.
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The Royal MInt letter is of almost as much interest as the coin, especially as it's written and signed by the very knowledgeable Graham Dyer.
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So, Brexit....What's happening?
1949threepence replied to azda's topic in Nothing whatsoever to do with coins area!
But paradoxically, such a manifestly idiotic statement just reflects back on the intellect of the writer. -
At least it's very easy to spot, Chris. I'm looking for a 1940 with a single exergual line. If I spot a couple of decent 1946 O N E ', types I'll let you know !
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I must confess, slabbing is not my thing, and the slabbed coins I've bought have soon been liberated from their plastic incarceration. However, if I were sending one to NGC for slabbing, and it was a distinct variety, I would add that to the details I sent along with the coin, with accompanying technical explanation and provenance. I honestly wouldn't expect or trust an American company to do that for me with regards to a British coin. I'm not even sure it's really their job to do so - after all, they are following the customer's wishes to a large extent. Although I'd imagine they are a lot hotter on the technicalities/varieties of US coins. If you buy a slabbed coin and it's got an incorrect variety attribution, I'd say that's down to the buyer's carelessness in not checking the pics properly first. I start from the standpoint that everybody I deal with is an idiot/charlatan/has defective eyesight/is careless, until proven otherwise. It's safer that way. I'd also follow the same process with LCGS, although I would anticipate them being more knowledgeable (although still far from infallible) on British coins.
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No Ian. I thought it was an interesting one to post, but I wasn't that keen personally.
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Crikey Pete, I never realised
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Thanks ! It's quite strange why it should be so elusive in good nick, considering the high mintage. Possibly Pete, although the same isn't true of 1961, where arguably there was a 12 year gap.
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Great. Thanks Pete, could you send me a pic?
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So, Brexit....What's happening?
1949threepence replied to azda's topic in Nothing whatsoever to do with coins area!
The entire argument is nonsensical. The majority of young people from working class areas voted to leave, whereas older voters from middle class areas often voted to remain. If every young person under say 25, had voted to remain, and every older person over 60 had voted to leave, then the argument would make more logical sense. I think the argument is based on London, which is different from everywhere else. -
Interesting one here
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I don't know. Possibly. Obviously if the coin continues in circulation and loses its lustre, then the fingerprints will vanish with the lustre.
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Classic rip off. Utter disgrace
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"'ole in the wall" as a pub name - love it ! Thanks Mick.
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Really interesting topic. How were these produced Mick? I have seen something similar in a fairground, where the punter stamps their own in a machine. But were the examples you show produced like that, or were they handed to customers, maybe with or without a coin inside them.
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I've seen them, and sometimes wondered precisely what criteria NGC use in determining whether a coin is MS65. I know they reject them if they've got verdigris, but fingerprints? who knows. Of course, there's fingerprints and fingerprints. Some are much more obvious than others. I always assume they were made shortly after minting. But of course, they might be the result of more recent careless handling.
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more FAKES
1949threepence replied to numismatist's topic in British Coin Related Discussions & Enquiries
It was always amusing the way cashiers used to hold notes up to the light to check their veracity, but at the same time would accept and pass the commoner fake £1 coins without so much as a second glance. -
So, Brexit....What's happening?
1949threepence replied to azda's topic in Nothing whatsoever to do with coins area!
I think you may be right Jerry. At any rate, I think I might keep out of it from now on. At least until something definite begins to happen. Can I just say, if I've had any disagreements with anybody, I don't think they've been too sharp, and it's definitely nothing personal. I like and respect everybody on here. If we were meeting in real life, we'd have a bit of a discussion about it, say how racked off we were with the entire thing, then have a drink and a laugh, and talk about coins or something else. Face to face never seems to get as personalised as it does in writing on a forum. -
more FAKES
1949threepence replied to numismatist's topic in British Coin Related Discussions & Enquiries
They were supposed to be uncrackable. Any fake £2 coins about? -
Not quite "penny acquisition of the week" territory. But still I'm very pleased with this 1921 F191. Zero ghosting, very good breastplate detail, and very good hair detail to the King's head as well. Great value GEF completely issue free bargain for just £5.00 from e bay seller hollingtonmoss. A well above average specimen from the poorly struck ghosting period of George V.
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So, Brexit....What's happening?
1949threepence replied to azda's topic in Nothing whatsoever to do with coins area!
Most people are saying "get on with it". They want closure, and I'd lay odds that the majority would have accepted May's deal as a reasonable compromise if it had gone through. At least we'd all see a way forward, and it would be delivering brexit. Albeit, not in its purest form. -
So, Brexit....What's happening?
1949threepence replied to azda's topic in Nothing whatsoever to do with coins area!
I think it goes way beyond party politics. The public (on both sides) just want to see completion and an end to this farce. If Corbyn can be instrumental in achieving that, then he is likely to get kudos. Don;t forget a very sizeable chunk of Labour voters also voted leave. They're not satisfied at the moment, but they would have been if the deal had gone through and we were purring along towards a smooth brexit in 2020.