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BKB

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Posts posted by BKB

  1. 1798 and 1797 1/4 in vf are cheap and easy. It is hard not to find them on ebay in 1 month. In AU they are hard, but still not very expensive -- $150 or so each...

    1797 no mm is harder. But, also is not too hard. Although, when I say that, I mean it in comparrison to other harder P1 coins. In comparisson to N2, everything is hard. :crazy:

  2. There are rare variants I don't have (eg Denga-sized cipher on a polushka).

     

    :bgreen:

     

    To add to what steve said: even KM coins (less 2 kop) are very difficult in decent condition. There are a lot of dugup rotten ones in russia, but I am still looking for most of them in decent gdarde. Also, am polushkas and dengas in good condition are also superhard. Narrow cypher (1797 am 2 kop) got a bit easier, but there is one sypher variant of that coin that is impossible to find. 1799 em 1/4 did not become easier in good condition. As for a rotten coin -- it would still be a lot of $ to purchase.

    1799 em 1/2 is very hard in good condition. 1800 and 1801 em minors are becoming extremely hard, but not as impossible as they used to be. Other than that -- everything is pretty easy. :bgreen:

  3. Sigi, I think that in order to discuss the possibility of this coin, there should be: 1) much better photos of this coin; 2) photos of the first and second "1" in good resolution. Otherwise, it is like discussing a UFO photograph. Someone shows a cellphone photo, that is not even that good for a cell phone, of a unique coin, and there are 2 pages of discussion... No wonder people on russian forum do not take this seriously, -- their reaction is completely justified. After all, this coin should not exist (as you well know). Therefore, one must do a damn better job than that crappy photo to prove otherwise. Just my 2c.

     

    P.S. Steve, I am 100% sure there is an error in Ilyin -- a 10 ruble coin would definitely show up at some point, with 40 -- 150 ruble coins popping up from time to time... Novodel with different edge.

  4. Yes, but cost is a big consideration. One thing is to get a fake at full price and another one is to get it at low price. Chances are consideribly higher to get a fake when getting something at low price on Ebay. Yes, miracles do happen, but not often enough. And as long as you were able to return all 4 items, you are still ahead (with more experience).

     

    I could make a good argument using the sale of a $300 fake for $17,000 + commission at auction last year, but I would probably get another letter from the auction proprietor... The only good thing about ebay: 1) Normally fakes are obvious, like this "Novodel" -- just ask for better photos; 2) The coins carry smaller price tag in comparison to auctions.

     

    However, the fakes that scare me are the ones that we cannot recognize so easily. It appears that high level forgeries have been sold by auction houses in US (and, at this point, I will say ALL auction houses) and abroad. Good examples are 1704 rubles, 1741 rubles of Ioan, Yefimoks, fake copper patterns and novodels, 1728 rubles, all sorts of commemorative coins, coins with plain edge, overstrikes (1796 em, 1791em, all 5 kop and 2 kop am's). You got a factory in Rostov producing high quality fakes. You got an outfit in Moscow that sells 1704, 1741 rubles for $150 -- 300 a pop, which were actually sold for huge amounts of $ at auction here and in europe. You got a ukrainian outfit that turns out copper pattern and novodel fakes. These things (good fakes) have been made since as early as 1980's. A fake 1712 ruble traces back to a 1991 SwissBank sale. By the way, it was graded by NGC, and later sold at 3 successive auctions culminating in a $18,000 price tag...

     

    Sometimes it feels that it is a miracle to buy an original, no matter what you are paying for it...

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