1966 Proof Set PCGS PR67
Very scarce this nice. I went through almost two dozen raw 1966 sets to find this one. The result: Two coins in PR69, three in PR68, and one in PR67. This is certainly one of the finest sets I've seen on the market in recent years. The fifty cent is particularly scarce this nice, being the equal-second finest graded by PCGS. The twenty and ten cent pieces are the equal finest available in PR69 (January 2013). The copper is spotless, and all coins are evenly matched. An inferior set, whose average grade was PR68, sold in a December 2012 auction for a whopping $3,930.37! And that set only had one PR69 coin in it (the twenty cent). My set, photographed above, is superior in almost every way, with every coin, with the exception of the two cent, in a higher grade. The new owner of this set will not be disappointed, and has the opportunity here to pick up a better set for a lower price. Individual grades are as follows: 50C: PCGS PR68DCAM 20C: PCGS PR69DCAM 10C: PCGS PR69DCAM 5C: PCGS PR68DCAM 2C: PCGS PR67RD DCAM 1C: PCGS PR68RD DCAM Professional Coin Grading Service is the global leader in coin authentication and grading. With over 60 million coins graded and counting, PCGS is trusted by collectors, dealers, and investors to certify authenticity, protect value, and elevate market confidence. This is a direct conversion of the 70-point PCGS grade to a 10-point scale, intended to present the grade in a more intuitive format for newer collectors. It is not our personal opinion or an attempt at regrading the coin to a different standard. To understand how the 70-point scale converts to a 10-point scale, [click here](https://drakesterling.com/en/page/the-ten-point-coin-grading-scale). Very scarce this nice. I went through almost two dozen raw 1966 sets to find this one. The result: Two coins in PR69, three in PR68, and one in PR67. This is certainly one of the finest sets I've seen on the market in recent years. The fifty cent is particularly scarce this nice, being the equal-second finest graded by PCGS. The twenty and ten cent pieces are the equal finest available in PR69 (January 2013). The copper is spotless, and all coins are evenly matched. An inferior set, whose average grade was PR68, sold in a December 2012 auction for a whopping $3,930.37! And that set only had one PR69 coin in it (the twenty cent). My set, photographed above, is superior in almost every way, with every coin, with the exception of the two cent, in a higher grade. The new owner of this set will not be disappointed, and has the opportunity here to pick up a better set for a lower price. Individual grades are as follows: 50C: PCGS PR68DCAM 20C: PCGS PR69DCAM 10C: PCGS PR69DCAM 5C: PCGS PR68DCAM 2C: PCGS PR67RD DCAM 1C: PCGS PR68RD DCAM