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#1
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FA: 1955/55 DDO Lincoln Cent PCGS MS-64 RD Oly..this one's for YOU
One of the finest Ms-64 RDs I've ever seen. In a 7 year old slab. Why
is this important? Because a few 64Rdson the market now, 2 of which are inPCGS slabs, have been reclored by coin doctor(s)! Within a year, the color becomes unnatoral and the coin can no longer be called original. After a coin has been recolored, the surfaces are then chemically active, and even within a slab, the surfaces continue to change visually. When the coloring is fresh and skillfully done, the coin can fool PCGS and NGC and the other two better slabbers. The rest of the grading companies just don't care as they offer no meaningful guarantees. This coin has remained unchanged for 7 years and the color is completely natural and original. Sorry, Oly, this one will cost you well over $8,000. See it at:http://cgi.ebay.com/1955-55-DDO-Linc...PCGS-MS-64-RD- Very-PQ-NR_W0QQitemZ250139097710 |
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#2
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FA: 1955/55 DDO Lincoln Cent PCGS MS-64 RD Oly..this one's for YOU
Ira wrote: One of the finest Ms-64 RDs I've ever seen. In a 7 year old slab. Why is this important? Because a few 64Rdson the market now, 2 of which are inPCGS slabs, have been reclored by coin doctor(s)! Within a year, the color becomes unnatoral and the coin can no longer be called original. After a coin has been recolored, the surfaces are then chemically active, and even within a slab, the surfaces continue to change visually. When the coloring is fresh and skillfully done, the coin can fool PCGS and NGC and the other two better slabbers. The rest of the grading companies just don't care as they offer no meaningful guarantees. This coin has remained unchanged for 7 years and the color is completely natural and original. Sorry, Oly, this one will cost you well over $8,000. See it at:http://cgi.ebay.com/1955-55-DDO-Linc...PCGS-MS-64-RD- Very-PQ-NR_W0QQitemZ250139097710 See if the following link works and thanks for looking. Ira http://cgi.ebay.com/1955-55-DDO-Linc...mZ250139097710 |
#3
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ONLY IRA IS GOD!!!
On Jul 3, 7:38 pm, Ira wrote:
Ira wrote: One of the finest Ms-64 RDs I've ever seen. In a 7 year old slab. Why is this important? Because a few 64Rdson the market now, 2 of which are inPCGS slabs, have been reclored by coin doctor(s)! Within a year, the color becomes unnatoral and the coin can no longer be called original. After a coin has been recolored, the surfaces are then chemically active, and even within a slab, the surfaces continue to change visually. When the coloring is fresh and skillfully done, the coin can fool PCGS and NGC and the other two better slabbers. The rest of the grading companies just don't care as they offer no meaningful guarantees. This coin has remained unchanged for 7 years and the color is completely natural and original. Sorry, Oly, this one will cost you well over $8,000. See it at:http://cgi.ebay.com/1955-55-DDO-Linc...PCGS-MS-64-RD- Very-PQ-NR_W0QQitemZ250139097710 See if the following link works and thanks for looking. Ira http://cgi.ebay.com/1955-55-DDO-Linc...Very-PQ-NR...- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Oh Ira, we worship your godhead IRA-WEH. Your briefcase is the holy of holies of numismatics! The ark of the covenant of the only GOD of ALL RCC numismatics! All hail and prostrate yourself before the GOD IRA ALMIGHTY!!!!! OZ GOD IRA!!! THE RCC CULT NOT WORTHY TO SUCK the toe jamb FROM between YOUR DIGITS but WHO DO SO ANYWAY! POUR THE KOOL_AIDE!!! OH GOD IRA!!! YOU ARE SO GREAT!!! IF IT IS NOT AN IRA COIN, IT IS DROSS!!! DROSS!!! BELIEVE ONLY IRA!!! WORSHIP ONLY IRA!!! LOVE HIM, LOVE HIS (7 year old) PLASTIC!!! Unworthy of you GODHEAD, all other dealers suck before YOU IRA! oly |
#4
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ONLY IRA IS GOD!!!
On Jul 3, 8:21 pm, oly wrote:
On Jul 3, 7:38 pm, Ira wrote: Ira wrote: One of the finest Ms-64 RDs I've ever seen. In a 7 year old slab. Why is this important? Because a few 64Rdson the market now, 2 of which are inPCGS slabs, have been reclored by coin doctor(s)! Within a year, the color becomes unnatoral and the coin can no longer be called original. After a coin has been recolored, the surfaces are then chemically active, and even within a slab, the surfaces continue to change visually. When the coloring is fresh and skillfully done, the coin can fool PCGS and NGC and the other two better slabbers. The rest of the grading companies just don't care as they offer no meaningful guarantees. This coin has remained unchanged for 7 years and the color is completely natural and original. Sorry, Oly, this one will cost you well over $8,000. See it at:http://cgi.ebay.com/1955-55-DDO-Linc...PCGS-MS-64-RD- Very-PQ-NR_W0QQitemZ250139097710 See if the following link works and thanks for looking. Ira http://cgi.ebay.com/1955-55-DDO-Linc...y-PQ-NR...Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Oh Ira, we worship your godhead IRA-WEH. Your briefcase is the holy of holies of numismatics! The ark of the covenant of the only GOD of ALL RCC numismatics! All hail and prostrate yourself before the GOD IRA ALMIGHTY!!!!! OZ GOD IRA!!! THE RCC CULT NOT WORTHY TO SUCK the toe jamb FROM between YOUR DIGITS but WHO DO SO ANYWAY! POUR THE KOOL_AIDE!!! OH GOD IRA!!! YOU ARE SO GREAT!!! IF IT IS NOT AN IRA COIN, IT IS DROSS!!! DROSS!!! BELIEVE ONLY IRA!!! WORSHIP ONLY IRA!!! LOVE HIM, LOVE HIS (7 year old) PLASTIC!!! Unworthy of you GODHEAD, all other dealers suck before YOU IRA! oly- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - P.S. there, oh great OZ - Any normal/sane person would choose 15 or 16 MS 63 St. Gaudens in PCGS or NGC holders, selected in person, of course. Or for that matter, maybe 19 or 20 one ounce AGEs But, members of the cult of IRA have more cents than sense. Winter is coming sayeth the Ant to the Grasshopper. oly |
#5
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ONLY IRA IS GOD!!!
On Jul 3, 8:34 pm, oly wrote:
On Jul 3, 8:21 pm, oly wrote: On Jul 3, 7:38 pm, Ira wrote: Ira wrote: One of the finest Ms-64 RDs I've ever seen. In a 7 year old slab. Why is this important? Because a few 64Rdson the market now, 2 of which are inPCGS slabs, have been reclored by coin doctor(s)! Within a year, the color becomes unnatoral and the coin can no longer be called original. After a coin has been recolored, the surfaces are then chemically active, and even within a slab, the surfaces continue to change visually. When the coloring is fresh and skillfully done, the coin can fool PCGS and NGC and the other two better slabbers. The rest of the grading companies just don't care as they offer no meaningful guarantees. This coin has remained unchanged for 7 years and the color is completely natural and original. Sorry, Oly, this one will cost you well over $8,000. See it at:http://cgi.ebay.com/1955-55-DDO-Linc...PCGS-MS-64-RD- Very-PQ-NR_W0QQitemZ250139097710 See if the following link works and thanks for looking. Ira http://cgi.ebay.com/1955-55-DDO-Linc...PQ-NR...quoted text - - Show quoted text - Oh Ira, we worship your godhead IRA-WEH. Your briefcase is the holy of holies of numismatics! The ark of the covenant of the only GOD of ALL RCC numismatics! All hail and prostrate yourself before the GOD IRA ALMIGHTY!!!!! OZ GOD IRA!!! THE RCC CULT NOT WORTHY TO SUCK the toe jamb FROM between YOUR DIGITS but WHO DO SO ANYWAY! POUR THE KOOL_AIDE!!! OH GOD IRA!!! YOU ARE SO GREAT!!! IF IT IS NOT AN IRA COIN, IT IS DROSS!!! DROSS!!! BELIEVE ONLY IRA!!! WORSHIP ONLY IRA!!! LOVE HIM, LOVE HIS (7 year old) PLASTIC!!! Unworthy of you GODHEAD, all other dealers suck before YOU IRA! oly- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - P.S. there, oh great OZ - Any normal/sane person would choose 15 or 16 MS 63 St. Gaudens in PCGS or NGC holders, selected in person, of course. Or for that matter, maybe 19 or 20 one ounce AGEs But, members of the cult of IRA have more cents than sense. Winter is coming sayeth the Ant to the Grasshopper. oly- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Sheesh, I ought to get 17 nice GOLD Saints for the same price as your COPPER/Bronze penny. And indeed your photo does seem to show a nice tin spot over the second five. Does PCGS guarantee that that tin spot is not gonna get worse? oly |
#6
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ONLY IRA IS GOD!!!
On Jul 3, 8:46 pm, oly wrote:
On Jul 3, 8:34 pm, oly wrote: On Jul 3, 8:21 pm, oly wrote: On Jul 3, 7:38 pm, Ira wrote: Ira wrote: One of the finest Ms-64 RDs I've ever seen. In a 7 year old slab. Why is this important? Because a few 64Rdson the market now, 2 of which are inPCGS slabs, have been reclored by coin doctor(s)! Within a year, the color becomes unnatoral and the coin can no longer be called original. After a coin has been recolored, the surfaces are then chemically active, and even within a slab, the surfaces continue to change visually. When the coloring is fresh and skillfully done, the coin can fool PCGS and NGC and the other two better slabbers. The rest of the grading companies just don't care as they offer no meaningful guarantees. This coin has remained unchanged for 7 years and the color is completely natural and original. Sorry, Oly, this one will cost you well over $8,000. See it at:http://cgi.ebay.com/1955-55-DDO-Linc...PCGS-MS-64-RD- Very-PQ-NR_W0QQitemZ250139097710 See if the following link works and thanks for looking. Ira http://cgi.ebay.com/1955-55-DDO-Linc...y-PQ-NR...text - - Show quoted text - Oh Ira, we worship your godhead IRA-WEH. Your briefcase is the holy of holies of numismatics! The ark of the covenant of the only GOD of ALL RCC numismatics! All hail and prostrate yourself before the GOD IRA ALMIGHTY!!!!! OZ GOD IRA!!! THE RCC CULT NOT WORTHY TO SUCK the toe jamb FROM between YOUR DIGITS but WHO DO SO ANYWAY! POUR THE KOOL_AIDE!!! OH GOD IRA!!! YOU ARE SO GREAT!!! IF IT IS NOT AN IRA COIN, IT IS DROSS!!! DROSS!!! BELIEVE ONLY IRA!!! WORSHIP ONLY IRA!!! LOVE HIM, LOVE HIS (7 year old) PLASTIC!!! Unworthy of you GODHEAD, all other dealers suck before YOU IRA! oly- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - P.S. there, oh great OZ - Any normal/sane person would choose 15 or 16 MS 63 St. Gaudens in PCGS or NGC holders, selected in person, of course. Or for that matter, maybe 19 or 20 one ounce AGEs But, members of the cult of IRA have more cents than sense. Winter is coming sayeth the Ant to the Grasshopper. oly- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Sheesh, I ought to get 17 nice GOLD Saints for the same price as your COPPER/Bronze penny. And indeed your photo does seem to show a nice tin spot over the second five. Does PCGS guarantee that that tin spot is not gonna get worse? oly- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Yep, sure looks like a genuine tin spot there over that second (or should I say third and fourth) digit five? Or is there a problem with the picture? When I get pre-1962 cents for elongating, I really can't use them if they have a tin spot like that one on your coin Ira. People think it ruins the aesthetics of an elongated coin when it has a honking big tin spot right in a focal area of an otherwise beautiful squished penny. Dontja know that tin spots kinda always get in a focal area of a cent, kinda like near the date, or right in front of old Abe - but right at the date is bad too, which is not a good place to have a honking big tin spot. Especially if the coin or elongated coin is otherwise kinda pricey, kinda like when you ask five or ten dollars for an older elongated. Even people who don't do round coins kinda have problems with tin spots in focal areas. Gotta watch out for them tin spots. oly |
#7
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ONLY IRA IS GOD!!!
On Jul 3, 9:03 pm, oly wrote:
On Jul 3, 8:46 pm, oly wrote: On Jul 3, 8:34 pm, oly wrote: On Jul 3, 8:21 pm, oly wrote: On Jul 3, 7:38 pm, Ira wrote: Ira wrote: One of the finest Ms-64 RDs I've ever seen. In a 7 year old slab. Why is this important? Because a few 64Rdson the market now, 2 of which are inPCGS slabs, have been reclored by coin doctor(s)! Within a year, the color becomes unnatoral and the coin can no longer be called original. After a coin has been recolored, the surfaces are then chemically active, and even within a slab, the surfaces continue to change visually. When the coloring is fresh and skillfully done, the coin can fool PCGS and NGC and the other two better slabbers. The rest of the grading companies just don't care as they offer no meaningful guarantees. This coin has remained unchanged for 7 years and the color is completely natural and original. Sorry, Oly, this one will cost you well over $8,000. See it at:http://cgi.ebay.com/1955-55-DDO-Linc...PCGS-MS-64-RD- Very-PQ-NR_W0QQitemZ250139097710 See if the following link works and thanks for looking. Ira http://cgi.ebay.com/1955-55-DDO-Linc...Very-PQ-NR...- - Show quoted text - Oh Ira, we worship your godhead IRA-WEH. Your briefcase is the holy of holies of numismatics! The ark of the covenant of the only GOD of ALL RCC numismatics! All hail and prostrate yourself before the GOD IRA ALMIGHTY!!!!! OZ GOD IRA!!! THE RCC CULT NOT WORTHY TO SUCK the toe jamb FROM between YOUR DIGITS but WHO DO SO ANYWAY! POUR THE KOOL_AIDE!!! OH GOD IRA!!! YOU ARE SO GREAT!!! IF IT IS NOT AN IRA COIN, IT IS DROSS!!! DROSS!!! BELIEVE ONLY IRA!!! WORSHIP ONLY IRA!!! LOVE HIM, LOVE HIS (7 year old) PLASTIC!!! Unworthy of you GODHEAD, all other dealers suck before YOU IRA! oly- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - P.S. there, oh great OZ - Any normal/sane person would choose 15 or 16 MS 63 St. Gaudens in PCGS or NGC holders, selected in person, of course. Or for that matter, maybe 19 or 20 one ounce AGEs But, members of the cult of IRA have more cents than sense. Winter is coming sayeth the Ant to the Grasshopper. oly- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Sheesh, I ought to get 17 nice GOLD Saints for the same price as your COPPER/Bronze penny. And indeed your photo does seem to show a nice tin spot over the second five. Does PCGS guarantee that that tin spot is not gonna get worse? oly- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Yep, sure looks like a genuine tin spot there over that second (or should I say third and fourth) digit five? Or is there a problem with the picture? When I get pre-1962 cents for elongating, I really can't use them if they have a tin spot like that one on your coin Ira. People think it ruins the aesthetics of an elongated coin when it has a honking big tin spot right in a focal area of an otherwise beautiful squished penny. Dontja know that tin spots kinda always get in a focal area of a cent, kinda like near the date, or right in front of old Abe - but right at the date is bad too, which is not a good place to have a honking big tin spot. Especially if the coin or elongated coin is otherwise kinda pricey, kinda like when you ask five or ten dollars for an older elongated. Even people who don't do round coins kinda have problems with tin spots in focal areas. Gotta watch out for them tin spots. oly- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Ya know, sometimes I'll pay two dollar a roll for 1974 Lincoln cents, because then I know I won't have to deal with tin spots. They don't have any tin in 'em at that point, don't ya know. I've elongated some nice uncirculated rolls of cents from the mid-1950s - people who lived at the time of a centennial in the mid-1950s really appreciate it when you roll a out a few hundred coins for the present day mid-2000s sesquicentennial celebration elongateds, but go to the troublt to use some of those fifty year old coins. And I don't mind using a few rolls of mid 1950s uncirculated cents, but damn, so many of them have great big honking tin spots. Tin spots are really a big question mark; will they get worse with the passage of time and ruin an otherwise beautiful elongated? That's not to say that the tin spot on your coin is all that bad Oz, but it is (well, it appears to be) a tin spot and those things tend to get worse with the passage of time and damn if they don't always appear right in a focal spot on the obverse of the coin! I'm glad that the Mint stopped using tin, but now they don't use copper either, MOL. Tin spots is a problem. oly |
#8
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ONLY IRA IS GOD!!!
On Jul 3, 9:13 pm, oly wrote:
On Jul 3, 9:03 pm, oly wrote: On Jul 3, 8:46 pm, oly wrote: On Jul 3, 8:34 pm, oly wrote: On Jul 3, 8:21 pm, oly wrote: On Jul 3, 7:38 pm, Ira wrote: Ira wrote: One of the finest Ms-64 RDs I've ever seen. In a 7 year old slab. Why is this important? Because a few 64Rdson the market now, 2 of which are inPCGS slabs, have been reclored by coin doctor(s)! Within a year, the color becomes unnatoral and the coin can no longer be called original. After a coin has been recolored, the surfaces are then chemically active, and even within a slab, the surfaces continue to change visually. When the coloring is fresh and skillfully done, the coin can fool PCGS and NGC and the other two better slabbers. The rest of the grading companies just don't care as they offer no meaningful guarantees. This coin has remained unchanged for 7 years and the color is completely natural and original. Sorry, Oly, this one will cost you well over $8,000. See it at:http://cgi.ebay.com/1955-55-DDO-Linc...PCGS-MS-64-RD- Very-PQ-NR_W0QQitemZ250139097710 See if the following link works and thanks for looking. Ira http://cgi.ebay.com/1955-55-DDO-Linc...-RD-Very-PQ-NR... - Show quoted text - Oh Ira, we worship your godhead IRA-WEH. Your briefcase is the holy of holies of numismatics! The ark of the covenant of the only GOD of ALL RCC numismatics! All hail and prostrate yourself before the GOD IRA ALMIGHTY!!!!! OZ GOD IRA!!! THE RCC CULT NOT WORTHY TO SUCK the toe jamb FROM between YOUR DIGITS but WHO DO SO ANYWAY! POUR THE KOOL_AIDE!!! OH GOD IRA!!! YOU ARE SO GREAT!!! IF IT IS NOT AN IRA COIN, IT IS DROSS!!! DROSS!!! BELIEVE ONLY IRA!!! WORSHIP ONLY IRA!!! LOVE HIM, LOVE HIS (7 year old) PLASTIC!!! Unworthy of you GODHEAD, all other dealers suck before YOU IRA! oly- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - P.S. there, oh great OZ - Any normal/sane person would choose 15 or 16 MS 63 St. Gaudens in PCGS or NGC holders, selected in person, of course. Or for that matter, maybe 19 or 20 one ounce AGEs But, members of the cult of IRA have more cents than sense. Winter is coming sayeth the Ant to the Grasshopper. oly- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Sheesh, I ought to get 17 nice GOLD Saints for the same price as your COPPER/Bronze penny. And indeed your photo does seem to show a nice tin spot over the second five. Does PCGS guarantee that that tin spot is not gonna get worse? oly- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Yep, sure looks like a genuine tin spot there over that second (or should I say third and fourth) digit five? Or is there a problem with the picture? When I get pre-1962 cents for elongating, I really can't use them if they have a tin spot like that one on your coin Ira. People think it ruins the aesthetics of an elongated coin when it has a honking big tin spot right in a focal area of an otherwise beautiful squished penny. Dontja know that tin spots kinda always get in a focal area of a cent, kinda like near the date, or right in front of old Abe - but right at the date is bad too, which is not a good place to have a honking big tin spot. Especially if the coin or elongated coin is otherwise kinda pricey, kinda like when you ask five or ten dollars for an older elongated. Even people who don't do round coins kinda have problems with tin spots in focal areas. Gotta watch out for them tin spots. oly- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Ya know, sometimes I'll pay two dollar a roll for 1974 Lincoln cents, because then I know I won't have to deal with tin spots. They don't have any tin in 'em at that point, don't ya know. I've elongated some nice uncirculated rolls of cents from the mid-1950s - people who lived at the time of a centennial in the mid-1950s really appreciate it when you roll a out a few hundred coins for the present day mid-2000s sesquicentennial celebration elongateds, but go to the troublt to use some of those fifty year old coins. And I don't mind using a few rolls of mid 1950s uncirculated cents, but damn, so many of them have great big honking tin spots. Tin spots are really a big question mark; will they get worse with the passage of time and ruin an otherwise beautiful elongated? That's not to say that the tin spot on your coin is all that bad Oz, but it is (well, it appears to be) a tin spot and those things tend to get worse with the passage of time and damn if they don't always appear right in a focal spot on the obverse of the coin! I'm glad that the Mint stopped using tin, but now they don't use copper either, MOL. Tin spots is a problem. oly- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I went and looked again to be fer sure, and while there are several goobers on my computer screen, isn't that a tin spot near the date? If I'm wrong, and it's not a tin spot, well I stand corrected (well, actually I sit corrected, because it's kinda hard to do all this typing and not be sit down in a nice sturdy chair, really, do you know very many people who compose on the computer while standing up?). But that green/grey color spot looks like it might be on the coin and damn don't ya just hate when that happens? Of course, my eyes aren't what they used to be and maybe I'll gp look at that lot again with some computer magnification. oly |
#9
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ONLY IRA IS GOD!!!
On Jul 3, 9:22 pm, oly wrote:
On Jul 3, 9:13 pm, oly wrote: On Jul 3, 9:03 pm, oly wrote: On Jul 3, 8:46 pm, oly wrote: On Jul 3, 8:34 pm, oly wrote: On Jul 3, 8:21 pm, oly wrote: On Jul 3, 7:38 pm, Ira wrote: Ira wrote: One of the finest Ms-64 RDs I've ever seen. In a 7 year old slab. Why is this important? Because a few 64Rdson the market now, 2 of which are inPCGS slabs, have been reclored by coin doctor(s)! Within a year, the color becomes unnatoral and the coin can no longer be called original. After a coin has been recolored, the surfaces are then chemically active, and even within a slab, the surfaces continue to change visually. When the coloring is fresh and skillfully done, the coin can fool PCGS and NGC and the other two better slabbers. The rest of the grading companies just don't care as they offer no meaningful guarantees. This coin has remained unchanged for 7 years and the color is completely natural and original. Sorry, Oly, this one will cost you well over $8,000. See it at:http://cgi.ebay.com/1955-55-DDO-Linc...PCGS-MS-64-RD- Very-PQ-NR_W0QQitemZ250139097710 See if the following link works and thanks for looking. Ira http://cgi.ebay.com/1955-55-DDO-Linc...-RD-Very-PQ-NR... - Show quoted text - Oh Ira, we worship your godhead IRA-WEH. Your briefcase is the holy of holies of numismatics! The ark of the covenant of the only GOD of ALL RCC numismatics! All hail and prostrate yourself before the GOD IRA ALMIGHTY!!!!! OZ GOD IRA!!! THE RCC CULT NOT WORTHY TO SUCK the toe jamb FROM between YOUR DIGITS but WHO DO SO ANYWAY! POUR THE KOOL_AIDE!!! OH GOD IRA!!! YOU ARE SO GREAT!!! IF IT IS NOT AN IRA COIN, IT IS DROSS!!! DROSS!!! BELIEVE ONLY IRA!!! WORSHIP ONLY IRA!!! LOVE HIM, LOVE HIS (7 year old) PLASTIC!!! Unworthy of you GODHEAD, all other dealers suck before YOU IRA! oly- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - P.S. there, oh great OZ - Any normal/sane person would choose 15 or 16 MS 63 St. Gaudens in PCGS or NGC holders, selected in person, of course. Or for that matter, maybe 19 or 20 one ounce AGEs But, members of the cult of IRA have more cents than sense. Winter is coming sayeth the Ant to the Grasshopper. oly- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Sheesh, I ought to get 17 nice GOLD Saints for the same price as your COPPER/Bronze penny. And indeed your photo does seem to show a nice tin spot over the second five. Does PCGS guarantee that that tin spot is not gonna get worse? oly- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Yep, sure looks like a genuine tin spot there over that second (or should I say third and fourth) digit five? Or is there a problem with the picture? When I get pre-1962 cents for elongating, I really can't use them if they have a tin spot like that one on your coin Ira. People think it ruins the aesthetics of an elongated coin when it has a honking big tin spot right in a focal area of an otherwise beautiful squished penny. Dontja know that tin spots kinda always get in a focal area of a cent, kinda like near the date, or right in front of old Abe - but right at the date is bad too, which is not a good place to have a honking big tin spot. Especially if the coin or elongated coin is otherwise kinda pricey, kinda like when you ask five or ten dollars for an older elongated. Even people who don't do round coins kinda have problems with tin spots in focal areas. Gotta watch out for them tin spots. oly- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Ya know, sometimes I'll pay two dollar a roll for 1974 Lincoln cents, because then I know I won't have to deal with tin spots. They don't have any tin in 'em at that point, don't ya know. I've elongated some nice uncirculated rolls of cents from the mid-1950s - people who lived at the time of a centennial in the mid-1950s really appreciate it when you roll a out a few hundred coins for the present day mid-2000s sesquicentennial celebration elongateds, but go to the troublt to use some of those fifty year old coins. And I don't mind using a few rolls of mid 1950s uncirculated cents, but damn, so many of them have great big honking tin spots. Tin spots are really a big question mark; will they get worse with the passage of time and ruin an otherwise beautiful elongated? That's not to say that the tin spot on your coin is all that bad Oz, but it is (well, it appears to be) a tin spot and those things tend to get worse with the passage of time and damn if they don't always appear right in a focal spot on the obverse of the coin! I'm glad that the Mint stopped using tin, but now they don't use copper either, MOL. Tin spots is a problem. oly- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I went and looked again to be fer sure, and while there are several goobers on my computer screen, isn't that a tin spot near the date? If I'm wrong, and it's not a tin spot, well I stand corrected (well, actually I sit corrected, because it's kinda hard to do all this typing and not be sit down in a nice sturdy chair, really, do you know very many people who compose on the computer while standing up?). But that green/grey color spot looks like it might be on the coin and damn don't ya just hate when that happens? Of course, my eyes aren't what they used to be and maybe I'll gp look at that lot again with some computer magnification. oly- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Yeah, you know sometimes the copper alloy in a nice Saint Gaudens doesn't mix as well as it should and you can get a coppery amalgamation on/ near the surface of a twenty dollar gold piece. But in the last resort, well an ounce of gold is always an ounce of gold and you can still sell it for melt and get some lunch. But them damn tin spots can sure take the wind out of the sales of a pricey Lincoln one cent, which of course is just three grams of copper plus a trace of that pesky tin. Man, as a numismatist and elongated coin roller, I really hate them tin spots. Or is that green/gray spot on the 7 year old plastic? Sometimes, ya know, plastic looses its integrity too if the goopy crap doesn't mix right or gets some impurities in it. Or maybe the spot was on your scanner, which would be too bad too because if it's on your scanner maybe that spot in the glass will get etched into the glass and then there will be a ghost spot on everything else you scan for ebay. But that still might be better than a tin spot. oly oly |
#10
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ONLY IRA IS GOD!!!
On Jul 3, 9:38 pm, oly wrote:
On Jul 3, 9:22 pm, oly wrote: On Jul 3, 9:13 pm, oly wrote: On Jul 3, 9:03 pm, oly wrote: On Jul 3, 8:46 pm, oly wrote: On Jul 3, 8:34 pm, oly wrote: On Jul 3, 8:21 pm, oly wrote: On Jul 3, 7:38 pm, Ira wrote: Ira wrote: One of the finest Ms-64 RDs I've ever seen. In a 7 year old slab. Why is this important? Because a few 64Rdson the market now, 2 of which are inPCGS slabs, have been reclored by coin doctor(s)! Within a year, the color becomes unnatoral and the coin can no longer be called original. After a coin has been recolored, the surfaces are then chemically active, and even within a slab, the surfaces continue to change visually. When the coloring is fresh and skillfully done, the coin can fool PCGS and NGC and the other two better slabbers. The rest of the grading companies just don't care as they offer no meaningful guarantees. This coin has remained unchanged for 7 years and the color is completely natural and original. Sorry, Oly, this one will cost you well over $8,000. See it at:http://cgi.ebay.com/1955-55-DDO-Linc...PCGS-MS-64-RD- Very-PQ-NR_W0QQitemZ250139097710 See if the following link works and thanks for looking. Ira http://cgi.ebay.com/1955-55-DDO-Linc...-RD-Very-PQ-NR... - Show quoted text - Oh Ira, we worship your godhead IRA-WEH. Your briefcase is the holy of holies of numismatics! The ark of the covenant of the only GOD of ALL RCC numismatics! All hail and prostrate yourself before the GOD IRA ALMIGHTY!!!!! OZ GOD IRA!!! THE RCC CULT NOT WORTHY TO SUCK the toe jamb FROM between YOUR DIGITS but WHO DO SO ANYWAY! POUR THE KOOL_AIDE!!! OH GOD IRA!!! YOU ARE SO GREAT!!! IF IT IS NOT AN IRA COIN, IT IS DROSS!!! DROSS!!! BELIEVE ONLY IRA!!! WORSHIP ONLY IRA!!! LOVE HIM, LOVE HIS (7 year old) PLASTIC!!! Unworthy of you GODHEAD, all other dealers suck before YOU IRA! oly- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - P.S. there, oh great OZ - Any normal/sane person would choose 15 or 16 MS 63 St. Gaudens in PCGS or NGC holders, selected in person, of course. Or for that matter, maybe 19 or 20 one ounce AGEs But, members of the cult of IRA have more cents than sense. Winter is coming sayeth the Ant to the Grasshopper. oly- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Sheesh, I ought to get 17 nice GOLD Saints for the same price as your COPPER/Bronze penny. And indeed your photo does seem to show a nice tin spot over the second five. Does PCGS guarantee that that tin spot is not gonna get worse? oly- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Yep, sure looks like a genuine tin spot there over that second (or should I say third and fourth) digit five? Or is there a problem with the picture? When I get pre-1962 cents for elongating, I really can't use them if they have a tin spot like that one on your coin Ira. People think it ruins the aesthetics of an elongated coin when it has a honking big tin spot right in a focal area of an otherwise beautiful squished penny. Dontja know that tin spots kinda always get in a focal area of a cent, kinda like near the date, or right in front of old Abe - but right at the date is bad too, which is not a good place to have a honking big tin spot. Especially if the coin or elongated coin is otherwise kinda pricey, kinda like when you ask five or ten dollars for an older elongated. Even people who don't do round coins kinda have problems with tin spots in focal areas. Gotta watch out for them tin spots. oly- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Ya know, sometimes I'll pay two dollar a roll for 1974 Lincoln cents, because then I know I won't have to deal with tin spots. They don't have any tin in 'em at that point, don't ya know. I've elongated some nice uncirculated rolls of cents from the mid-1950s - people who lived at the time of a centennial in the mid-1950s really appreciate it when you roll a out a few hundred coins for the present day mid-2000s sesquicentennial celebration elongateds, but go to the troublt to use some of those fifty year old coins. And I don't mind using a few rolls of mid 1950s uncirculated cents, but damn, so many of them have great big honking tin spots. Tin spots are really a big question mark; will they get worse with the passage of time and ruin an otherwise beautiful elongated? That's not to say that the tin spot on your coin is all that bad Oz, but it is (well, it appears to be) a tin spot and those things tend to get worse with the passage of time and damn if they don't always appear right in a focal spot on the obverse of the coin! I'm glad that the Mint stopped using tin, but now they don't use copper either, MOL. Tin spots is a problem. oly- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I went and looked again to be fer sure, and while there are several goobers on my computer screen, isn't that a tin spot near the date? If I'm wrong, and it's not a tin spot, well I stand corrected (well, actually I sit corrected, because it's kinda hard to do all this typing and not be sit down in a nice sturdy chair, really, do you know very many people who compose on the computer while standing up?). But that green/grey color spot looks like it might be on the coin and damn don't ya just hate when that happens? Of course, my eyes aren't what they used to be and maybe I'll gp look at that lot again with some computer magnification. oly- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Yeah, you know sometimes the copper alloy in a nice Saint Gaudens doesn't mix as well as it should and you can get a coppery amalgamation on/ near the surface of a twenty dollar gold piece. But in the last resort, well an ounce of gold is always an ounce of gold and you can still sell it for melt and get some lunch. But them damn tin spots can sure take the wind out of the sales of a pricey Lincoln one cent, which of course is just three grams of copper plus a trace of that pesky tin. Man, as a numismatist and elongated coin roller, I really hate them tin spots. Or is that green/gray spot on the 7 year old plastic? Sometimes, ya know, plastic looses its integrity too if the goopy crap doesn't mix right or gets some impurities in it. Or maybe the spot was on your scanner, which would be too bad too because if it's on your scanner maybe that spot in the glass will get etched into the glass and then there will be a ghost spot on everything else you scan for ebay. But that still might be better than a tin spot. oly oly- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Of course, considering the cigarette machine story so often associated with the 1955 Lincoln double-die Cent, it MIGHT be a tobacco spot. My grandpa chewed tobacco (actually he chewed cigars and spat or swallowed the 'backy as he felt like) and there were tobacco spots all over in the insides of his pickup truck. My brother still has that 1952 Ford truck as a kind of an heirloom, and perhaps I'll go look in the cab and compare it to the spot in your picture, Ira. But then if the coin was vended in cellophane, that makes it less likely to be a tobacco spot and rather more likely to be a tin spot. That's one line of reasoning. That's too bad, because a fifty year old tin spot could be more subject to change than a fifty year old tobacco spot. But if a 1955 Lincoln double die Cent had a tobacco spot, that might be a kind of environmental diagnostic indicator that would tend to suggest its authenticity, which would be a good and helpful kind of diagnostics, at least spotwise, compared to a good for nothing damn old pesky tin spot. oly |
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