John Reich wrote:I looked through my copy of J.L. Riddell's Monograph of the Silver Dollar (counterfeit detection book from 1845). There are a lot of counterfeit 8 reales pieces listed, but your piece wasn't in the book. It really does appear to be a contemporary counterfeit and as such, should have some collector value. There were literally hundreds of different varieties of these pieces made from the 1820's thru the 1860's and new varieties are being discovered all the time. Nice score if you picked the piece up for metal value! These pieces are rare, cool pieces of our early economic history--and are really neat examples of early American folk art besides.
frugi wrote:John Reich wrote:I looked through my copy of J.L. Riddell's Monograph of the Silver Dollar (counterfeit detection book from 1845). There are a lot of counterfeit 8 reales pieces listed, but your piece wasn't in the book. It really does appear to be a contemporary counterfeit and as such, should have some collector value. There were literally hundreds of different varieties of these pieces made from the 1820's thru the 1860's and new varieties are being discovered all the time. Nice score if you picked the piece up for metal value! These pieces are rare, cool pieces of our early economic history--and are really neat examples of early American folk art besides.
wow. i had no idea.
John Reich wrote:Check out what this guy is asking for counterfeit 2 reales pieces. http://www.davewcoins.com
Recyclersteve wrote:It should be fairly easy to get good quality counterfeits of many types of valuable coins for perhaps $10 each or less. The fact that someone would charge $300-600 each for these obvious fakes is, frankly, offensive. If someone looks, for instance, on Alibaba they can find fake one ounce gold coins in quantity for perhaps $2-3 each including shipping from China. It used to be easy to get fakes on eBay, but they've pretty much cleaned up their act in this regard.
John Reich wrote:I think the 1798 piece is a die-struck contemporary counterfeit. It's definitely well worth checking out. I collect contemporary counterfeit bust half dollars and some of them are very common, and some are unique or nearly so. The unique pieces bring the most money, but even common pieces usually sell for about what a genuine coin would bring. The 1790 piece appears to be cast. It could be contemporary, but contemporary cast pieces aren't worth as much as die-struck pieces, while Chinese cast coins are worth scrap. Some do collect contemporary cast coins though, so it would be worth checking it out as well. I would try emailing your photos to Dave and see what he says. He specialized in counterfeit 2 reales pieces before he became a full time dealer and would definitely know more about your coins than I would.
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