Nystagmus wrote:From what I understand, the silver eagles in this set have the second lowest mintage ever behind the 1995 W proof. Only two of the coins in the set are unique, so if the box is opened there is no way of knowing if the other three coins came with the set. It seems to me that the population of the three "plain" coins can only keep dropping since many people will open the boxes and only send off the two unique coins for grading. Is it possible that these plain coins in graded form could end up being much more rare than the 1995 w?
Nystagmus wrote:From what I understand, the silver eagles in this set have the second lowest mintage ever behind the 1995 W proof. Only two of the coins in the set are unique, so if the box is opened there is no way of knowing if the other three coins came with the set. It seems to me that the population of the three "plain" coins can only keep dropping since many people will open the boxes and only send off the two unique coins for grading. Is it possible that these plain coins in graded form could end up being much more rare than the 1995 w?
Nystagmus wrote:From what I understand, the silver eagles in this set have the second lowest mintage ever behind the 1995 W proof. Only two of the coins in the set are unique, so if the box is opened there is no way of knowing if the other three coins came with the set. It seems to me that the population of the three "plain" coins can only keep dropping since many people will open the boxes and only send off the two unique coins for grading. Is it possible that these plain coins in graded form could end up being much more rare than the 1995 w?
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