All About Coin Collecting: Grade Coins with Ease!

All About Coin Collecting: Grade Coins with Ease!

Coin collection is not just about having as many coins as possible. More important than the number of coins is the quality of those coins. This quality is measured by the coins’ grade and the grade is measured using a scale from zero to seventy (seventy being the highest point grade). Doctor William Shelby introduced this point scale in his work “Penny Whimsy”.

Here are the classifications of coins according to grade.

1. “Mint State” Coins

This is equivalent to a value of 60 to 70 in the Shelby’s grade scale. This means that the coin has no blemishes whatsoever. Most of the coins in this category are uncirculated, shiny, new coins, with absolutely no signs of wear.

2. “Almost Uncirculated” Coins

The “Almost Uncirculated” coins have a point grade of 50, 55, or 58.

It is very important to note that in these coins, coin collectors must know the locations of the high points in a particular coin. By checking the difference of the light reflected in the high points to the other parts of the coin, an “Almost Uncirculated” coin is separated from the Mint State coins.

3. “Fine Coins”

These can further be classified as” Extremely Fine” (40, 45), “Very Fine” (20, 25, 30, and 35) or “Fine” (12) depending on the sharpness of the remaining details on the coins. The coins are observed to have wear but the designs are still intact.

For “Extremely Fine” coins, the mint luster is still present.

“Very Fine” coins can be compared to coins which have been used for 1-3 years. Minor features of the coins are already gone.

4. “Good Coins”

These coins can be specifically defined as “Very Good” (12), “Good” and “Almost Good” coins.

The coins in this category are worn out. Only weak designs can be observed since the details of the coins in the high points are nearly smooth.

Full rims must be observed for the “Very Good” coins category.

In the case of “Good” coins, the mint mark and the date must be visible.

On the other hand, “Almost Good” coins are the most worn of coins in this category.

5. “Fair Coins”

The coins are “worn out”, but can still be distinguished as belonging to one of the types of coins - as long as one can identify a coin, it is a “Fair C”.

6. “Basal Coin”

These metals that can be determined to be coins - but the kind of coin are undeterminable.

With the classifications described, it will be very easy to grade coins. Just remember that knowledge of the coins’ grades gives coin collectors advantages!



Coin Collecting News

  • In & Around Roxbury Township
    FRIDAY, July 30 The Sixth annual Talent Show of Hope, entitled A Beautiful Nite of Sharing will take place at 7:05 p.m. at the Eisenhower Middle School, Succasunna. Doors Open at 6:30 p.m. The event benefits charities from Roxbury to Africa. Please bring non-perishables for Roxbury Social Services Pantry. The minimum donation is $7 for adults and $5 for children 3 and up and for seniors ...

  • 6 things you shouldn't sell at a garage sale
    Your garage is probably the most convenient place to stage a sale, but it may not be the most profitable.

  • Collectors converge on Bossier Civic Center
    Indistinguishable murmurs filled the Bossier Civic Center as hundreds navigated the slipshod isles looking for seemingly lost treasures as part of the Ark-La-Tex Coin, Stamp and Card Exposition.

  • POLITICAL ECONOMY
    A congressional subcommittee has been asked to investigate the growing backlog in and foreign procurement of U.S. bullion and collectors' precious metals coin blanks manufactured by the U.S. Mint.

  • A guide to training camps around the league
    A guide to training camp, as NFL teams look toward the beginning of the 2010 season.

  • An NFL Preseason Q&A to get fans in the right frame of mind for training camps to open
    Question: The clock continues to tick on the NFL's collective bargaining agreement, which expires next March. What are the chances of the players and owners striking a new deal in the next few months?

  • Secret Agent: The feds bought Wayne McLeod's lies. He stole their futures.
    When Kenneth Wayne McLeod held a gun to his head and ended his life, it left a single bullet hole in the driver's side window of his Hummer. The dark tint of the black sport utility vehicle's window held the shattered glass together. The film was like the lies the 48-year-old Jacksonville financial adviser hid behind for years, a slick facade that kept investors in his fraudulent bond fund ...

  • Local horseshoe players 'talkin' trash, making ringers'
    The sharp, sustained clang of steel striking steel repeats again and again for nearly three hours every Wednesday evening at Elk's Riverside Park.