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bobh

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Posts posted by bobh

  1. What price did the beard token bring (lot 137)?

     

    I didn't bid on anything in this auction -- wouldn't have had a chance on the nicer things, anyway. :(

    Sold for 3,250.00 CHF

     

    Thanks ... that must be the most attractive beard token (original, not novodel) that I have ever seen! I suspected it would go for a high price like this.

  2. What kind or quality of glass pane do you use for this? I am getting frustrated because of focussing issues which I THINK are due mostly to aberrations in the reflective glass I am using. It's just an A4 (approx. US-Letter) size glass pane from a very cheap picture frame...

     

    I am sure there are better (more expensive) alternatives, but since I don't know much about optics I wouldn't know what to buy.

  3. You would see it is a novodel from the way coin looks like... Those were minted much later, after the re-tolling. So the quality is much higher... I wish I could help you with weights, but all my novodels are slabbed :-(

     

    I wonder how much variation there is in the weight of a slab -- from the same company, of course? One could calculate it by taking coins of different types, but known weights, in similar slabs and doing some basic arithmetics.

     

    Of course, the diameter of the coins should be the same, otherwise it wouldn't work out correctly.

  4. Hi!

     

    Would anyone here have information on how much do 1830's (wings down eagle) 5 kopeek Novodels weigh? Is there any consistency among them in terms of weight?

     

    Thanks in advance!

     

    Since neither Brekke nor Bitkin show any different dies for the novodels, I would assume they were struck from original dies and therefore should weigh about the same as the originals. But I really don't know anything about this series at all.

  5. Although most of the coins I collect just cannot be found in circulation anymore, I do get a thrill when I see something unusual in my pocket change. There was one convenience store located in the underground shopping passage of the railway station here where I work (Switzerland), and I once received a 20 cent piece dated 1908 and a 10 cent piece dated 1912 in my change money -- at different times, but both from the same store! :crazy: Someone must have been spending a collection little by little.

     

    The most recent find -- cannot recall if it was from that same store or not -- was a 1967 silver 5 Franc piece ... Switzerland called in all silver coinage back then, later striking everything only in copper-nickel (for everything but 5 cents) or copper-zinc (? for 5 Rappen?). It has become quite rare to find any silver coins in circulation these days, although finding some older 10 and 20 cent minors as I did is not quite as rare. I was also thrilled to find a nice BU silver 50 cent coin from 1967 once in my change.

     

    For other things, I used to shop quite a lot on eBay back in the days when there was still good material to be had there. Today, I rarely buy anything there unless it is from one of a few respectable dealers with whom I have done business in the past.

     

    I frequent some local coin shows and dealers, but I have been gravitating more and more to the more established international auctions. There just isn't any other way to acquire nice material these days, although the dealers I mentioned will have a nice Morgan dollar or Indian cent on occasion. Imperial Russian material has just about dried up except for the auctions, and even then it just isn't nearly what it used to be. :(

  6. There are technologies that websites can use to get around this problem, but they're complex and 99 times out of a 100 it's just not worth the effort.

     

    Really? I was under the impression that if you can see an image in your browser, then there is at least a temporary picture file already in the cache somewhere on your computer.

     

    Generating a watermark on every image from the server seems like the best option to me (very easy to implement using the GD library). I think ebay used to do this, anyway; don't know why they reverted to showing plain images.

  7. Not in great shape, but a rare type. I already posted pictures from the auction right after I won it; now, several months later, I finally had time to take my own photos of it.

     

    USA 2 Cents, 1864-SM (small motto):

    USA_2_Cents_1864_SM_obv.thumb.jpgUSA_2_Cents_1864_SM_rev.thumb.jpg

     

    Here's a nice Barber dime I recently acquired:

     

    USA Barber dime, 1899:

    USA_Barber_Dime_1899_obv.thumb.jpgUSA_Barber_Dime_1899_rev.thumb.jpg

  8. Here are some recent Russian acquisitions of mine. These first four are from the most recent Hess-Divo auction back in May this year; the two modern commemorative coins were a chance find at a local dealer here in Zurich.

     

    7-1/2 roubles, 1897 - wide rim variety:

     

    RUSSIA_7_5_Roubles_1897_wide_rim_obv.thumb.jpgRUSSIA_7_5_Roubles_1897_wide_rim_edge_001.thumb.jpgRUSSIA_7_5_Roubles_1897_wide_rim_rev.thumb.jpg

     

    5 roubles, 1910-ЭБ:

    RUSSIA_5_Roubles_1910_EB_obv.thumb.jpgRUSSIA_5_Roubles_1910_EB_edge_001.thumb.jpgRUSSIA_5_Roubles_1910_EB_rev.thumb.jpg

     

    25 kopecks, 1859 (variety St. George with cape):

    RUSSIA_25_Kopecks_1859_St_George_with_cape_obv.thumb.jpgRUSSIA_25_Kopecks_1859_St_George_with_cape_rev.thumb.jpg

     

    20 kopecks, 1889:

    RUSSIA_20_Kopecks_1889_obv.thumb.jpgRUSSIA_20_Kopecks_1889_rev.thumb.jpg

     

  9. Ok, thanks for the catch. I think it's fixed now to download a zip file of 22 images. I'll be adding two more tomorrow of a genuine and fake 1912 Napoleon commemorative from JRNS 7. There's a neat way to filter originals that have associated forgeries and forgeries and display them on a form side by side with associated text on how to compare.

     

    I'll have a screen shot of that on the coins download page, but the download of the database itself has to wait pending any Severin copyright issues, whether to switch to Julian, and whether the literature test goes anywhere. I've written to Bob Julian hoping he can provide some guidance.

     

    Ron

     

    What are these copyright issues exactly? This is what is stated in the original Severin silver coins reference:

    severin0002.jpg

  10. 2. The lit, medals, coins databases and a photograph record & related music collectibles started with Dbase in the mid 1980's, converted to Access 1.0 in 1993. The function you see today was esentially completed in 1993....no schemata, no DDL except out of my head and the databases evolving to do exactly what I personally thought should be done. It was a done deal in 1993

     

    Those were the days ... I started with Access 2.0 back in 1993 or 1994; Gateway (don't exist anymore, I think) had a special offer for a PC with Windows 3.1 and MS-Office 4.3 pre-installed. Before that, I had a used IBM-XT with a Hercules graphics card and memory expansion board which could run CP/M programs like WordStar and a flat-file database called "File Express". The PC cost me about $1,000 -- 2nd hand! It is gathering dust in a closet somewhere. Apparently people collect them!

     

    5. I'm fully aware of the distain many database professionals hold for Access. You and Steve think alike. But I'm also aware that many feel that for a small number of users, smaller size databases, no mission critical data, etc it works fine as a combined development platform and jet database engine. Also, with extensions such as SQL stored tables, Access Projects, etc it can be significantly extended. We're not talking a Bank of America transaction processing system here

     

    Well, I think even for a quick mock-up, it is not much fun once you start getting corrupted databases. But this is seriously OT by now, so I'll be quiet.

     

    As to Severin numbers, are you referring to Bob Julian's reference table? He maps Severin to his own numbers, I think. Don't have the book in front of me right now. But Severin was published a long time ago, certainly more than 50 years ago by now.

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