i have that token... with that index he is probably rare..price?? » Quick access to the last post
Quote: "PetrusAscanus"Welcome to Numista.thanks for help.. so am unlucky :( probably nobody need that coin :/
The rarity index of 97 is the number of members that have this token, not if it is scarce.
The value is not much more the what a collector wants to gove for it
Quote: "Camerinvs"When questions about the reliability of the rarity index are raised, I now point to the Canadian $1,000,000 coin's rarity index. Note that two Numista members want to exchange it; I don't know whether they need the money or just happen to have a duplicate.Thanks for the explanation, tem token i only found here and i was expecting something special i guess that somebody can tell me the frame price of that.
And according to the rarity index of 97, one member of Numista has the Australian $1,000,000 coin.
I don't know what it is, but something tells me that they are all making that up.
Quote: "PetrusAscanus"The rarity index of 97 is the number of members that have this token, not if it is scarce.Tardjo, this explanation is a bit misleading, don't take it literally. A rarity index of 97 doesn't mean 97 of our members have the coin/token. The Numista rarity index is related to the number of members. A rarity index of 97 means only 1 member has it, 95 means 2 members has it, and so on. The lower the number, the more members have it.
The value is not much more the what a collector wants to give for it
Quote: "Essor Prof"=1em So medieval coins and golden coins mostly have high numbers not necessarily because they are rare but because less few members collect these.Correction: because less few members can afford it
Quote: "Indomini16"Correction: because less few members can afford itHahaha, that was I thinking too while I was writing my post.
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