Knock Your Eyes Out! Monster DMPL Morgan Dollar Purchase coinauctionshe... BUY COINS From Us portsmouthcoin... Go to our help community here for coin help More videos! www.youtube.co... Join CONECA conecaonline.org/
Knock Your Eyes Out! Monster DMPL Morgan Dollar Purchase coinauctionshelp.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=33147 BUY COINS From Us portsmouthcoinshop.com/ Go to our help community here for coin help coinauctionshelp.com/forum/index.php More videos! www.youtube.com/@CoinHELPu/videos Join CONECA conecaonline.org/
I’m genuinely DEPRESSED that the 2nd 84-CC DMPL you showed already sold - just checked your site - man I wish I’d caught this vid earlier! I would have paid ALL the money for that one AND THEN SOME. Thanks for sharing. ⭐️👍🏻☮️
Congrats Daniel - that was a great purchase - I always cheer when you do well because you're a great dude that always shares your honest opinion based on real-world experience , honestly want to help others with their coins and a you're real credit to the hobby !! Thanks for sharing these great finds with us...a lot of us may never be able to afford most of these coins so you sharing them with us is as close as we may ever get - thanks kindly !!
I really like the backdrop for this.Aside from those beautiful Morgans,who is the inspiration for the real lady liberty is a great question.I believe early American coinage was not designed after anyone in particular.But the real lady liberty could be from the Statue of Liberty( Augusta Charlotte Bartholdi), possibly Anna Willis Williams (the Morgan design) or the Roman goddess,Libertas.Were'nt all those designs around the same time frame? Just a thought
I used to collect coins when I was a kid. I started up again last week because I've inherited a small coin collection. Let me tell you, things have changed since the 1970s, and I'm overwhelmed as a newbie!!! Hoping I can get back into it, that's IF I can wrap my brain around EVERYTHING. LOL.
Morgans are my favorite coin to collect. Those DMPL silver dollars are just amazing to look at - especially the 1881-S MS67. I just purchased one in MS61 condition. I like it a lot, but it's not nearly as nice as that MS67. 🧐🤓
Great video, Daniel. Another great collection it amazing. How many are out there. Some of the collectors I imagine break their hearts having to sell their collection for one reason or another. It ashamed that they have to sell them. That aside, it's lucky for us now that we all have a chance to buy some amazing coins. Thanks again, Daniel, for all you do for the hobby, and have a great day.
I am always to late to me the 80s in 63dmpl and both the Carson city coins were nice I really fell in love with the 80s but someone else beat me to it I always say if it’s really really nice for grade it will sell it’s self and that one did o well there out there I will get me one I am going to be very picky and build my guardhouse box of 20 Morgan’s toners and dmpl and pl coins I figure if you pick out the really nice ones they will treat you well down the road
So one thing I like about this channel is the videos always make me think, and this one made me do some digging. Why do some of these PL coins look like they were struck yesterday with hardly any noticable chemical reactions on their surface? Well it has to do with them being prooflike. The more polished a metal is, the lower it's surface area becomes. Lustre is like a microscopic mountain range on a coin. If you smoothed it all out perfectly flat you'd have a coin 2-3 times the size probably depending how strong the lustre was. (Idk that's a guess, but it would be much larger and that's the point here) The larger surface area on the molecular scale for lustrous coins allows more space for more atoms to bond to. This gives them a more oxodized surface than the glassy PL coins that have undergone the same storage conditions. Rough metal corrodes faster than smooth metal. So look at the lustre characteristics before you write the coin off as being dipped! Stunning coins! Thank you for sharing.
I don't know about the flat verses the rough surface. Not when it comes to coins. Coins tone based on many factors but mostly due to how they're stored.
@@CoinHELPu Yes, I agree. The storage of the coins determine what toning will happen. But across all metals that oxidize or corrode, a mirror like finish will prevent it from happening at the same rate as a rougher surface. Your last two videos made me get to researching it.
Beautiful. Do you find that ANACS is more conservative when adding a PL or DMPL to the grade? I'm going to post a 1921-D on the Community page which I feel deserves at least a PL designation but the ANACS grader gave feedback of 'Mirrors not deep enough'. This is the first possible PL I've seen on a 1921-D. It did receive an MS-64 straight grade.
That's a nice pick up Daniel,I have some 80 s and 81 s proof likes,seems like Sanfranciso mint must have really took quality serious when preparing their dies,I see a lot of nice Morgan's from those years.
The early S mint morgans are stunners. I want a nice one from a later die stage that has a lot of lustre but they're kinda tough to find here in Canada.
I used to have 83cc dmpl ms-64 and 84cc ms-63 dmpl and i have never seen such dark mirrors on any other dmpl "ever" and i had a nice set of cc's and pl/dmpl collection and is still what i seek out. Those mirror's were almost black they were so deep!
Loved them all. Thank you for sharing. Have a question about them, though. A lot of them seemed to have scratches or rub marks. Doesn't that hurt the grading, though?
Honestly, up until now, I didn't know anything about what 'DMPL' was in numismatics. I thought that proofs were as good as you could get. Daniel, knowing how much you appreciate the best of the best, I'm surprised that you didn't have a heart attack when you first laid eyes on these. You were drooling though, weren't you? Whoever this original collector was, he only acquired the cream of the crop. Are there any that you will add to your own private collection and not sell? I wonder............
Daniel what do you know about mom's piggy bank? I swear we talk about coins and next thing I know you post a video pertaining to something I talk about in my show. We must be telepathically connect. Love your videos. You teach and help us so much. I continue to help spread the knowledge that you share. Thanks you for everything that you do!
Daniel, from my experienc few dealers ever have m,s. red lincoln cents in stock, especiall grade ones.Have you foud that to be true? If so why do you suppose that is?
I saw an interview with an expert on PL and dmpl coins, and he said the later date O mint PL's and dmpl's we're normal to not have the cameo look as the earlier ones. Not sure why this was the case.
It could that they are made from used dies. On a fresh die they dip them in acid to burn the cameo on then polish it off of just the fields. But after 20,000 strikes or whatever they go to check the die. If it's still good they refinish it. But since they're used already they might just polish up the fields, and throw it back in the press without doing the cameo step. That would be my guess.
I do think something is wrong there when the sold auction results don't match. It makes me wonder if they don't have the larger dealers in their ears on pricing.
How bout the vault box coins for a conflict of interest? Grading your own coins you are selling... not much of a third party grading service at that point. In my opinion this takes away from their credibility also.
No coin should get a DMPL or PL designation unless the grade is MS 67 or greater. Proof coins are supposed to be perfect. If you grade MS 63 or 64, how can that command Proof Like unless it is close to perfect. I don't see that here, and this is just my opinion of course.
These are NOT proof coins, I explain that in the video. Also proofs are NOT supposed to be perfect or close to it. Proofs are different and it’s a proof finish, different dies and can be circulated. So you can have PRAU and proof extra fine.
@@CoinHELPuI never said they were proof coins. So you are saying proof coins are not supposed to be flawless and/or close to perfect? Then what would you call a proof coin that grades at Proof 69 or 70?? I'll bet you would call it flawless and/or close to perfection, right? I mean, isn't that the whole point of proof coins? Flawless with deep reflective backgrounds with frosty cameo raised devices. I guess I have been misinformed and I am mistaken. Love your videos!
No, a proof isn't perfect or near perfect, that is not what a proof is supposed to be. Proofs are known by the dies they're struck by and can be identified by die marks from specially designed and prepared dies. If you search auction records or population reports you will see that there's a lot of proof coins graded in almost uncirculated, extra fine, very fine ect. Proof coins isn't about condition or grade, it's about the dies that struck the coin, how they're designed and how they're prepared and struck more than one time. It's not about grade or mirrors. Proof coins can be any grade and be toned and not be reflective. PR69 isn't near perfect and PR70 isn't perfect, it's just the highest grade a proof coin can obtain.
All you have to do is lock the focus when your showing coins...no reason for autofocus being on, any cheap camera can lock the focus and it will never have a problem going blurry on dmpl coins.
I'm gonna give up trying to help...raise the F stop and lower the shutter speed...you need to hire somebody just once if you aren't knowledgeable in audio & video. My last comment on these topics, but your doing a lot of videos yearly..it's worth getting the stuff handled professionally. GL.
@@uniform1313 I am using a brio camera, there's not F stop or shutter speed. Like I said. It is what it is, cause I want to move the coin around and closer and further away. I wasn't complaining to get help, just warning my viewers.