beauanderos wrote:I'm thinking about doing a test run on ebay. Picture half a dozen absolute slicks. No date even partially visible. Market them as silver bullion and list correct gram wt, and their worth at current melt. But THEN... in your description... get very creative. Create a mental image of "what if."
"It may not be possible now, but what if, in the future, a method is developed to accurately determine the dates and mintmarks that are obscured on heavily worn coins? Coins in the worst currently valued grades now (AG3), such as a 1916-D Mercury Dime, a 1913-S or 1901-S Barber Quarter, a 1916 Standing Liberty Quarter, are worth thousands of dollars. An 1894-S Barber Dime, even in extremely poor condition, would be virtually priceless. What would lower grade coins be worth? Certainly more than the spot price of silver. There are other examples, too numerous to mention, that could be worth hundreds of dollars apiece. All, that is, if sometime in the future, methods can be determined to accurately identify these coins, perhaps via the use of high-powered magnification by third party grading services, and certified as such, without causing damage to the coins. What have you got to lose? Without a doubt, these coins are worth $xxx as silver bullion. But... WHAT IF?"
Alrighty then... doesn't this cover all the ethical issues we have discussed in other threads? Caveat emptor? They know exactly the value of what they are bidding on, if anyone bid higher than melt, they would only have themselves to hold responsible. Pros? Cons? Does this cross the line? Or would it simply be creative marketing?
Rodebaugh wrote:Ebay Heading: "Ray's Roll of No Date 1916-D Mercury Dimes Silver NR"
beauanderos wrote:Rodebaugh wrote:Ebay Heading: "Ray's Roll of No Date 1916-D Mercury Dimes Silver NR"
No... but how about "Unidentifiable silver quarter, who knows what it could be worth?" The more online research I'm doing (towards possible date recovery) the more legitimacy is being lent to this idea.
Treetop wrote:beauanderos wrote:Rodebaugh wrote:Ebay Heading: "Ray's Roll of No Date 1916-D Mercury Dimes Silver NR"
No... but how about "Unidentifiable silver quarter, who knows what it could be worth?" The more online research I'm doing (towards possible date recovery) the more legitimacy is being lent to this idea.
then why arent you instead looking to buy more slicks? Instead of selling what you have?
Corsair wrote:I know there is a way to recover serial numbers on guns that have been filed away. Something about the alignment of the molecules can identify the number, even if millimeters to centimeters of metal is gone.
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