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Peter Rubels


Blackdrone

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Hello!

 

Here is my new purchases.

 

They are original?

 

What is the values?

 

 

Do I understand you correctly?

 

You are buying coins.

You have no idea whether those coins are genuine or not.

Assuming that they are genuine, you have no idea of what is a fair price to pay for them.

 

Is that a fair assessment of the situation?

 

By the way, the 1721 is not a rouble, but a poltina (half rouble).

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Do I understand you correctly?

 

You are buying coins.

You have no idea whether those coins are genuine or not.

Assuming that they are genuine, you have no idea of what is a fair price to pay for them.

 

Is that a fair assessment of the situation?

 

By the way, the 1721 is not a rouble, but a poltina (half rouble).

 

I getting this coins for free.. :ninja:

 

I Know the half rouble.

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Hello!

Here is my new purchases.

They are original?

from your pics they look genuine to me :ninja:

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I getting this coins for free.. ;)

Congratulations, you are very fortunate. :ninja:

 

I'm still not sure that I understand. Maybe there is a language barrier. ;)

 

In your original post, you say "Here is my new purchases", but also say "I getting this coins for free.." ;)

 

In English, "purchase" means to buy something with money. And if you buy it, then it is not "free".

 

This is very confusing for me.

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I can relate to Grivna's confusion.

Blackdrone's posts puzzle me.

At this point Blackdrone has access to all the search engines needed to figure out the approximate value based on the past auctions. Which is much better than getting our subjective guess.

Also, how can we tell if these coins are genuine based on the quality of pictures?

1723 looks polished, but it could be fake.

poltina I can not even see.

1725 looks sort of reasonable, but the picture is out of focus or something...

So how can we really tell anything of value here?

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I can relate to Grivna's confusion.

Blackdrone's posts puzzle me.

At this point Blackdrone has access to all the search engines needed to figure out the approximate value based on the past auctions. Which is much better than getting our subjective guess.

Also, how can we tell if these coins are genuine based on the quality of pictures?

1723 looks polished, but it could be fake.

poltina I can not even see.

1725 looks sort of reasonable, but the picture is out of focus or something...

So how can we really tell anything of value here?

 

I agree. There is no way that anyone here can give an authoritative answer to the question without weighing the "coins" and seeing them up close. There is a chance with well-struck 19th or 20th century coins with clear pictures of sufficient resolution to attempt an opinion, but with early 18th century coins and all the striking problems and varieties coupled with poor pictures and no weight data, it's impossible to even attempt an answer to the question of authenticity.

 

The fact that he got them for free indicates that the person who had them before believed them to be of low value (or worthless).

Marv

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