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Bobbcue said:Thanks for your answer. There are many unscrupulous people out there. How would you know if someone cut a reale and passed it off as "pieces of eight"
Wayne P said:I always list where and when I find something getting as much history and info as possible. While I don't sell my finds future generations may not have my passion and so they will at least be able to get the most for these treasured finds I made.
Bobbcue said:Thanks for your answer. There are many unscrupulous people out there. How would you know if someone cut a reale and passed it off as "pieces of eight"
Iron Patch said:The edge would be way to shiny so it would be obvious it was a new cut.
DiveWrecks said:Iron Patch said:The edge would be way to shiny so it would be obvious it was a new cut.
Edges can be buffed to remove striations from cutting and then the coin artificially aged using chemical toners. This is easier than it sounds if you know what you are doing.
Stan
Digger54 said:I think they would have a hard time convincing anyone that they found all eight pieces. The chances of finding all eight pieces to the same coin by a digger would have to be astronomical at best. The original purpose of cutting a coin was to make change. The likelyhood that the coin was cut up but all pieces retained by the owner and lost in one location is an extreme long shot.
Iron Patch said:The effort needed would far outweigh the montary gain so the fact it can be done is pretty much irrelevant.
realeswatcher said:Digger54 said:I think they would have a hard time convincing anyone that they found all eight pieces. The chances of finding all eight pieces to the same coin by a digger would have to be astronomical at best. The original purpose of cutting a coin was to make change. The likelyhood that the coin was cut up but all pieces retained by the owner and lost in one location is an extreme long shot.
True, BUT you would never sell it in intact... you would pass them one by one to different people...
Iron Patch said:The effort needed would far outweigh the montary gain so the fact it can be done is pretty much irrelevant.
Not true, so long as we're talking about EITHER a true pillar-style OR a portrait 8R (aka the "Modified Pillar" design) ... A so-so Mexico Charles III portrait 8R had be had for about $50-65... Without much difficulty, you could get $30-40 per individual cut piece on eBay.
Iron Patch said:If it was that easy to turn $50 into $280 and do it non stop I think you'd see someone doing it. But we can agree to disagree.
DiveWrecks said:Iron Patch said:If it was that easy to turn $50 into $280 and do it non stop I think you'd see someone doing it. But we can agree to disagree.
These pieces regularly appear on Ebay, so it DOES happen with some degree of frequency.
Stan
Iron Patch said:DiveWrecks said:Iron Patch said:If it was that easy to turn $50 into $280 and do it non stop I think you'd see someone doing it. But we can agree to disagree.
These pieces regularly appear on Ebay, so it DOES happen with some degree of frequency.
Stan
How do you know they are recent cuts?
realeswatcher said:Iron Patch said:DiveWrecks said:Iron Patch said:If it was that easy to turn $50 into $280 and do it non stop I think you'd see someone doing it. But we can agree to disagree.
These pieces regularly appear on Ebay, so it DOES happen with some degree of frequency.
Stan
How do you know they are recent cuts?
I think Stan may have meant that pieces which are purported to be authentic regularly appear on eBay (which they do... though I'd say more quarter-cuts of pistareens show up than eighth-cuts of 8R coins). Of course, the cynical question to ask would be "How do you know they AREN'T recent cuts?"...
On topic, see this lot from the most recent Sedwick auction. It didn't sell, but then again, he was telling us that they were modern fabrications (from authentic shipwreck pillar 8R). To be fair, they look pretty good:
http://www.icollector.com/Promotional-set-of-2-bits-cut-from-Hollandia-pillar-dollars_i10431101
Compare that to this lot... I think these went for kind of wacky money, but still worth noting:
http://www.icollector.com/Lot-of-2-...sh-bust-8R-one-with-clear-date-1808_i10432022
realeswatcher said:Digger54 said:I think they would have a hard time convincing anyone that they found all eight pieces. The chances of finding all eight pieces to the same coin by a digger would have to be astronomical at best. The original purpose of cutting a coin was to make change. The likelyhood that the coin was cut up but all pieces retained by the owner and lost in one location is an extreme long shot.
True, BUT you would never sell it in intact... you would pass them one by one to different people...
Good point that I did not consider as I assumed the monetary value of a single wedge was not significant by itself as a single sale.
If the channel of sales was through Ebay then the seller's history is there to be reviewed and a savy buyer might see the red flag.