>>20871532>>20872331Glad to be back with the frens!
>>20871022>We'd need an accurate weight and measurements but if it's not just something a bored dude made by sandwiching coins in a vice it could be pretty special.I'll sauce you will all that, now i have a precision electronic caliper, it is a very useful tool, i use it all the time. I'd be surprised if it is just a troll, because it's from a serious seller i often buy from who own incredible oddities (often too expensive for my tastes sadly).
>>20871838It is the perfect symbiosis then. You let them deal with the bulk of normie bullion, while you focus on the more cryptic arcanes of high value numismatics and such. Over time it will attract a new kind of customers who will come to see what treasures you propose in store. On top of some of the regulars you might also convince to delve into numis, since your passion is very contagious. I am curious to know how you cook the pricing for numismatics in a store, do you try to find a middle ground between ebay last sold auctions and prices displayed in online specialized stores (who are often x2/3), or do you go by price catalogues displayed on NGCcoin and such? Maybe others metrics?
Over time listing coins, i found price tagging correctly was one of the most time consuming task, especially when it comes to rare/ancient coinage like medieval vatican stuff and such.
>>20871992Kek nice, please try to remain a decent human being. Even tho i consider myself a very honest guy (i never stole stuff or scammed ppl with intent) in some instances i believe i'd have a hard time resisting a good deal. Idk how do you handle for example a clueless millenial trying to ditch a deceased relative's collection at any price. Let say they ask you for melt but in the lot you notice very valuable stuff, like a key date or rare design, would you point it out or would you play dumb until they leave?
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