Will a CAC Sticker Double the Value of Your PCGS Error? Analyzing the Premium for the 1971-S Eisenhower Dollar FS-401 PegLeg Misattribution
June 15, 2026The Capital Gains and Tax Guide for Selling Toned Coins in Holders: What Every Collector Needs to Know Before Cashing In
June 15, 2026Building a type set is one of the most rewarding journeys in numismatics — a tangible walk through history, one coin at a time. But how do you choose the right representative for each slot? That question has kept me up at night more than once, and a recent forum discussion about a puzzling Chilean Peso drove it home with fresh urgency.
I’ve spent years refining my approach to selecting the right coin for every slot in my Dansco albums. Every now and then, though, a piece lands on my desk that upends everything I thought I knew about what constitutes a “type.” That’s exactly what happened in a thread about a Chilean Peso sitting squarely on the blurry line between business strike and pattern. It forced me to confront questions every type set collector wrestles with: How do you pick the best strike for a given type? When does composition outweigh surface appearance? And what do you do when the grading service you trust doesn’t see what you see in front of you?
This post grew out of that conversation. It’s a real-world numismatic mystery with implications for every type set collector — whether you’re working on a tight budget or assembling a world-class cabinet.
The Coin That Started It All: A Chilean Peso Enigma
The thread in question centered on a Chilean Peso submitted to NGC. The collector described it as proof-like and noticeably lighter than the standard 0.500 silver regular issue. That single detail should set off alarm bells for any experienced numismatist. When a coin doesn’t match the expected weight and surface characteristics of a known business strike, you don’t shrug — you investigate.
The collector did exactly the right thing: he sent it to NGC with detailed notes on the submission form. NGC graded it as a business strike. He pushed back. So NGC ran an XRF analysis — X-ray fluorescence, the gold standard for determining metal composition — and the results were striking: 75% copper, 5% nickel, 20% silver. That’s radically different from the 50% silver composition of the regular issue.
Even more compelling, this composition matches Pn47, the copper-nickel pattern listed in Krause’s Standard Catalog of World Coins. Yet NGC returned the coin in a business strike holder, maintaining that “the composition isn’t off enough to note the variation.”
Let that sink in. The composition is the pattern composition. The weight is wrong. The surfaces are proof-like. And the coin was still labeled a business strike. For a type set collector, this is more than a grading dispute — it’s a case study in how third-party services can sometimes fail the very collectors they’re meant to serve.
Why Composition Matters in Type Set Building
When you’re building a type set, every slot represents a design, a denomination, or a significant variation in a series. But what actually defines a “type”? Is it the design alone? The denomination? The metal composition? The method of manufacture?
In my experience, the most satisfying type sets are the ones that account for meaningful compositional differences. Think about the U.S. type set: you wouldn’t slot a 1943 steel cent and a 1944 bronze cent into the same space, even though they share the same Lincoln design. The composition difference is what makes each coin a distinct type.
The same logic applies globally. If Krause lists Pn47 as a documented pattern with a specific copper-nickel-silver alloy, then a coin matching that composition — especially one with proof-like surfaces and anomalous weight — deserves serious consideration as a pattern, not a business strike.
The Krause Standard and Its Limits
Krause catalogs are the backbone of world coin collecting. When a composition is listed under a “Pn” (pattern) number, it means numismatic scholarship has recognized that alloy as distinct from regular issue. But Krause isn’t infallible, and it doesn’t cover every anomaly. The forum discussion raised an important point: if this coin is partly silver but doesn’t match Pn47 exactly, it could represent an undocumented variation — potentially even deserving of a new KM number.
For the type set collector, this is where things get exciting. An undocumented or rarely documented composition variant could be a significant find, with greater collectibility and numismatic value than the standard business strike you’d slot into your Dansco album.
Choosing the Best Strike for Your Type
One of the most debated topics among type set collectors is: what constitutes the “best” representative of a given type? There’s no single answer, but here are the factors I weigh every time I evaluate a coin for my set:
- Strike quality: Is the design fully struck up? Are the high points sharp? A weakly struck coin, even if rare, doesn’t showcase the design well.
- Surface quality: For a type set, you want a coin that’s clean, attractive, and free of major distractions. Hairlines, scratches, and spots undermine the eye appeal.
- Originality: Has the coin been cleaned, polished, or otherwise altered? Original surfaces — with honest patina and undisturbed luster — are almost always preferable.
- Eye appeal: This is subjective but critical. A coin with even color, strong luster, and good centering will always be more satisfying in a type set than a technically equal but visually dull example.
- Authenticity and attribution: This is where the Chilean Peso case becomes instructive. If your coin’s composition doesn’t match the standard issue, you need to understand why before you slot it into your album.
Proof-Like Business Strikes: A Gray Area
One forum participant asked a perceptive question: “Are there PL business strikes known within the surviving population? And if so, do either service grade and designate a business strike as PL?”
This is a nuanced issue. Proof-like business strikes do exist — coins struck from polished dies or on polished planchets that exhibit mirror-like fields but weren’t intentionally produced as proofs. Both NGC and PCGS will designate business strikes as “PL” or “Prooflike” under certain conditions. However, when a proof-like coin also has an anomalous composition, the situation becomes much murkier. A proof-like finish combined with a non-standard alloy is a strong indicator that the coin may be a pattern or special strike, not a routine business strike.
For the type set collector, this distinction matters enormously. A proof-like pattern slot is a very different animal from a proof-like business strike, both in terms of historical significance and market value.
Dansco Albums: The Type Set Collector’s Foundation
No discussion of type set building is complete without talking about Dansco albums. For decades, Dansco has been the go-to choice for collectors assembling type sets in the United States and around the world. Their albums offer pre-labeled slots with designations that provide a clear roadmap for completion.
But here’s the thing every Dansco user eventually discovers: the slots don’t always tell the whole story. A Dansco album for world coins or Latin American coins will typically have one slot per major type. It won’t have separate slots for patterns, trial strikes, or off-metal varieties — unless you’re using a specialized album designed for that purpose.
This is both a strength and a limitation. The simplicity of a Dansco album keeps you focused on the major types. But it also means you need to make judgment calls about where to place unusual pieces. Do you put your off-metal Chilean Peso in the standard Peso slot? Do you create a custom insert? Do you leave it out of the album entirely and display it separately?
My approach is to use Dansco albums as the backbone of my type set, supplemented by custom Capital Plastics holders or 2×2 cardboard flips for significant variations that deserve their own space. This way, the album tells the primary story, while the supplemental pieces add depth and nuance.
Organizing a Type Set with Variations
If you’re serious about including compositional variations in your type set, consider this organizational framework:
- Primary slot: The standard business strike in the best affordable grade — ideally mint condition or close to it, with strong eye appeal.
- Variation slots: Separate spaces for patterns, proofs, off-metal strikes, and significant date or mint mark varieties.
- Documentation: A written or digital record explaining why each variation is included, with references to Krause, specialized catalogs, auction records, or third-party grading notes.
This approach transforms your type set from a simple checklist into a scholarly collection that tells a richer story about the coinage of a given country or era. It also strengthens provenance, which matters enormously when the time comes to sell or pass your collection along.
Budget vs. High-End Type Collecting: Where Do Off-Metal Strikes Fit?
Let’s talk money. One of the most common questions I hear from fellow collectors is: “Can I build a meaningful type set on a budget?” The answer is absolutely yes — but you need to be strategic.
A budget type set prioritizes completion and representation over rarity and condition. You’re looking for coins in VF to XF range, with clean surfaces and decent eye appeal, at the lowest possible cost. Off-metal strikes and patterns are generally not the focus of a budget set, because they’re often more expensive and harder to authenticate.
However, there’s a middle ground. Some patterns and off-metal strikes are surprisingly affordable, especially for countries with less developed collector markets. A Chilean Peso pattern, for example, might cost less than a high-grade U.S. type coin — and it carries far more numismatic intrigue.
The High-End Approach
At the high end, type set collecting becomes a pursuit of the finest known examples, rare varieties, and historically significant pieces. This is where off-metal strikes and patterns truly shine. A well-documented pattern coin, especially one with a compelling story (like the grading dispute we’ve been discussing), can be a centerpiece of a world-class type set.
High-end collectors also tend to be more selective about third-party grading. When you’re paying premium prices, you need confidence that the coin is correctly attributed. This is exactly the situation the forum poster found himself in — a coin that may be worth significantly more as a pattern than as a business strike, but that NGC refused to designate accordingly.
Navigating Third-Party Grading Disputes
The Chilean Peso case highlights a frustration that many collectors share: third-party grading services don’t always get it right, especially when it comes to world coins, patterns, and unusual compositions.
Here’s my advice for handling grading disputes:
- Document everything. Weigh your coin, measure its diameter and thickness, and photograph it carefully before submission. If the composition is in question, consider getting an independent XRF analysis before sending it to a grading service.
- Submit with detailed notes. The forum poster did this, and it was the right move. Unfortunately, it wasn’t enough in this case.
- Push back respectfully but firmly. When a grading service makes an error — or what you believe is an error — request a review. Provide references, citations, and evidence.
- Ask for label notes. Even if NGC or PCGS won’t change the designation, they may be willing to note the composition and weight on the label. This at least provides future buyers with the information they need.
- Consider a second opinion. As one forum participant suggested, try submitting to the other major service. PCGS and NGC don’t always agree, and a different set of eyes might reach a different conclusion.
- Seek expert endorsement. If you have access to a recognized authority on the series — a researcher, author, or dealer with deep expertise — their opinion can be persuasive, both to grading services and to potential buyers.
The Bigger Picture: Grading Service Limitations
It’s worth noting that grading services like NGC and PCGS are primarily optimized for the U.S. coin market. Their expertise in world coins, patterns, and off-metal strikes is often more limited. This isn’t a criticism — it’s a structural reality. When you submit a Chilean Peso with an unusual composition, you’re asking a service that processes millions of U.S. coins to make a nuanced judgment about a niche area of world numismatics.
One forum participant speculated that NGC might be thinking about debased issues like the 1933–35 Peru soles, which were surreptitiously produced with reduced silver content. That’s a reasonable hypothesis — grading services often try to fit unusual coins into categories they already understand. But it also illustrates the problem: when the reference frame is wrong, the attribution will be wrong too.
Actionable Takeaways for Type Set Collectors
Let me distill the lessons from this discussion into concrete steps you can take for your own collection:
- Always verify composition when something seems off. If a coin is lighter, heavier, or different in color than expected, investigate before you slot it into your album.
- Use Krause as a starting point, not the final word. Cross-reference with specialized catalogs, auction records, and scholarly articles to build a fuller picture of any rare variety.
- Consider off-metal strikes and patterns as type set enhancements. Even if your Dansco album doesn’t have a dedicated slot, these pieces add tremendous depth to your collection.
- Don’t rely solely on third-party grading for attribution. Grading services are excellent for authentication and condition assessment, but they’re not infallible when it comes to variety attribution, especially for world coins.
- Build relationships with series experts. Whether it’s a dealer, researcher, or fellow collector, having a knowledgeable second opinion can save you from costly mistakes — or help you recognize a significant find.
- Document your collection thoroughly. A well-documented type set is more valuable, more collectible, and more satisfying to own. Record the provenance of every unusual piece you acquire.
The Threshold Question: When Is a Coin “Off-Metal” Enough?
Returning to the original forum thread title — “Threshold for Off-Metal Strike designation” — the question remains unresolved. How different does a coin’s composition need to be before it’s recognized as a distinct type? Is it a percentage point? A metallurgical category? A documented reference in Krause?
In my view, the threshold should be any composition that is meaningfully different from the regular issue and that aligns with a documented pattern or trial. The Chilean Peso in question meets both criteria: it’s compositionally distinct (75% copper, 5% nickel, 20% silver vs. 50% silver), and it matches a Krause-listed pattern (Pn47). The fact that NGC couldn’t — or wouldn’t — make that connection is a failure of the system, not a reflection of the coin’s actual status.
For the type set collector, this means you sometimes need to trust your own research over the label on a slab. A coin’s designation is important for market purposes, but your understanding of what the coin is matters more for the integrity of your collection.
Conclusion: The Type Set as a Living Document
Building a type set is never truly finished. Every new acquisition, every grading dispute, and every forum discussion adds a layer of understanding that deepens your appreciation for the coins you collect. The Chilean Peso case is a perfect example: what began as a simple question about a grading designation evolved into a broader conversation about composition, attribution, the limits of third-party services, and the philosophy of type set building itself.
Whether you’re working with a Dansco album on a tight budget or assembling a six-figure cabinet of the world’s finest type coins, the principles are the same. Choose the best strike you can afford. Verify what you can verify. Document everything. And never stop learning.
Off-metal strikes, patterns, and compositional anomalies aren’t distractions from the type set — they’re enhancements. They represent the moments when mints experimented, when economies shifted, when history left its fingerprints on the metal. Capturing those moments in your collection is what transforms a type set from a checklist into a numismatic narrative.
So the next time you pull a coin from an envelope and something doesn’t look right — the weight is off, the color is wrong, the surfaces don’t match — don’t dismiss it. Investigate. Research. Push back if you have to. That coin might just be the most interesting piece in your entire collection.
Related Resources
You might also find these related articles helpful:
- The Top 5 Costly Mistakes New Collectors Make With Pattern Coin Designations — How to Avoid Buying Cleaned Coins, Overpaying for Common Dates, and Trusting Bad Holders – We all make mistakes when we start collecting, but some are more expensive than others. Here is how to avoid the classic…
- Auction House Secrets: How to Maximize Profits Selling a Toned-in-Holder 1942 Mercury Dime at Auction – There’s a world of difference between listing a coin on eBay and consigning it to a major auction house — and if y…
- Trading the Gold-to-Silver Ratio Using Off-Metal Strikes: A Numismatic Edge for the Precious Metal Strategist – Smart stackers don’t just hold; they trade the ratios. Here’s how this item fits into a broader precious met…