PeacePeople said:Lastly, it's a bullion coin for heaven's sake...
Thank you!
PeacePeople said:Lastly, it's a bullion coin for heaven's sake...
If that happens in my lifetime, it'll be the day I'm done adding any more legal tender to my stack.bloomst said:Sooner or later people will have accept the fact that $5/spot is the cost of having a legal tender physical silver 1oz.
Fat Freddy said:If that happens in my lifetime, it'll be the day I'm done adding any more legal tender to my stack.bloomst said:Sooner or later people will have accept the fact that $5/spot is the cost of having a legal tender physical silver 1oz.
iluvbeanz said:Just received mine. Some coins look like they've been through a blender. 3 tubes total, 2 had broken seals, one had its guts spilling out. From this tube, all 25 coins were scratched up. Here is a still image taken from the following video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oezUUt7tgrE#t=1m52s
http://i.imgur.com/QImThLB.png
Just a statistical / logic based comment here:PeacePeople said:People buy from them for the prices they offer in hopes of getting a "70" quality coin. When they find a minute imperfection, they send it back hoping they'll get somebody to go thru a bunch of them to get them the perfect coin. They're not set up to do that, so they put up the disclaimer to discourage the cherry picking consumers they have.
Miloman said:We can buy eagles cheaper than crocs from a dealer. And eagles are much better quality.
Hmm... pros and cons starting to look 50/50 now.
Why do we get ripped off in Australia???
goldpelican said:PeacePeople said:Lastly, it's a bullion coin for heaven's sake...
Thank you!
bloomst said:Miloman said:We can buy eagles cheaper than crocs from a dealer. And eagles are much better quality.
Hmm... pros and cons starting to look 50/50 now.
Why do we get ripped off in Australia???
Which dealer sell ASE cheaper than Crocs? Are you sure? Crocs was priced to compete with ASE.
Just about everything is more expensive in AUstralia...wages is higher etc etc.
Holdfast said:goldpelican said:PeacePeople said:Lastly, it's a bullion coin for heaven's sake...
Thank you!
That's not acceptable as a dealer and we do not accept your comments as a high profile dealer!
Folk who buy coins expect a decent coin.
Dealers should have the capacity to send unacceptable coins back to Perth.
Bullion coins that you folk (Dealers) sell come with a hefty premium and folk should and do expect quality for a premium.
If you accept crap coins from Perth, that is up-to you but the market does not want them.
You should send them back to Perth for their melting pot!
H
goldpelican said:Not sure what's unacceptable about me agreeing with an end consumer that these are bullion coins.
I stand by my earlier comments about the quality of the Crocodile coins I have personally handled. Two culls out of thousands. Note the word cull - they were not sold to customers. I have not seen coins of the low quality iluvbeanz has received in what we have handled - however the tubes do have a large air gap, and depending on how the rounds are treated in post-dealer shipping, it would be easy to see how they could arrive in that condition if they've been jostled and shaken.
The issues with the air space in the tubes and the poor adhesion on some of the security strips HAS been passed onto the mint. And they were already aware of similar feedback when I spoke with the relevant manager on Friday on the issue.
The bullion grade comment is direct from the Perth Mint - they are what they are, "commercial" strikes (a similar term in the US would be a business strike), they have been cranked out as bullion coins that are NOT mean to replicate the quality you would find with a Koala or Kookaburra. People wanted a lower priced legal tender round. It was forthcoming. With the learnings of pushing out a million coins of a new minting approach and packaging format (that sold out to dealers in 19 days - that's a pretty fast clip), there will be learnings that will see the next issue in this form factor improved. A tube redesign has already been suggested as likely.
Miloman said:goldpelican said:Not sure what's unacceptable about me agreeing with an end consumer that these are bullion coins.
I stand by my earlier comments about the quality of the Crocodile coins I have personally handled. Two culls out of thousands. Note the word cull - they were not sold to customers. I have not seen coins of the low quality iluvbeanz has received in what we have handled - however the tubes do have a large air gap, and depending on how the rounds are treated in post-dealer shipping, it would be easy to see how they could arrive in that condition if they've been jostled and shaken.
The issues with the air space in the tubes and the poor adhesion on some of the security strips HAS been passed onto the mint. And they were already aware of similar feedback when I spoke with the relevant manager on Friday on the issue.
The bullion grade comment is direct from the Perth Mint - they are what they are, "commercial" strikes (a similar term in the US would be a business strike), they have been cranked out as bullion coins that are NOT mean to replicate the quality you would find with a Koala or Kookaburra. People wanted a lower priced legal tender round. It was forthcoming. With the learnings of pushing out a million coins of a new minting approach and packaging format (that sold out to dealers in 19 days - that's a pretty fast clip), there will be learnings that will see the next issue in this form factor improved. A tube redesign has already been suggested as likely.
GP,
this is heading south pretty quick.
Rounds that are 99c above spot like the Pegasus are far superior!
The truth is we are getting ripped off with third rate over priced inferior product, I'm going buy some capsules and pop the lid on a tube or two.
The fact that a Prestigious Mint like Perth Mint... I mean it's THE ACTUAL PERTH MINT, the one and only... and they are producing a product like damaged coins is more than disappointing.
I know dealers are RAKING IT IN by charging premiums that are FAR MORE not a little than all the way in AMERICA.
This is not a debate. A debate has opposition, this doesn't have any defense.
Holdfast said:We just want bullion coins that are decent!
We are sick of the BS.
We are sick of having to worry about purchasing Proof or bullion coins with milk or other anomalies.
We pay decent money we want decent products.
WE WANT QUALITY NOT QUANTITY!
Are you dealers and Mints so brain-dead that you don't hear us!
Take some fing stress off your workers and designers...slow down and...produce quality not quantity!
H
I collect vintage cars ...wanna sell it ?goldpelican said:Can only respond with based on my experience - the boxes I've received shipped straight from the mint have not contained coins like that. There is an issue with tube air spacing, so the rattling that coins experience after leaving the mint is likely what's causing issues unless there's been shifts (the mint is running triple shifts at the moment) where there's been QC issues that I haven't encountered with the coins I or my staff have handled.
The air space issue would actually explain the remarks at Provident's website - ship the coins 16,000km and then a few thousand more domestically within the US, and if there's the potential for coins to be damaged in tubes in transit, there's plenty of opportunity for it to happen.
Not even going to bother entering the argument on pricing in Australia. Last I checked (and Melbourne SS meeting members can attest to this) I drive a 14yo car - it's the scrap merchants that "rake it in" in the Australian bullion scene.