This is the blog of the Atlantic County Numismatic Society, the coin club of record for Atlantic County, New Jersey. ACNS is affiliated with the American Numismatic Association (ANA) and the Garden State Numismatic Association (GSNA).
The ACNS meets on the first Wednesday of each month at the Linwood Library. Meetings start at 7:00pm with an auction at 8:00pm. We look forward to seeing you there.
A post on the Mint News Blog provides collectors with the price for the 2009 Ultra High Relief Gold Double Eagle.
The new pricing methodology is based primarily on the London Fix weekly average (average of the London Fix prices covering the previous Thursday a.m. Fix through the Wednesday a.m. Fix) platinum and gold prices, which reflect the market value of the platinum and gold bullion that these products contain.
As required by law, the prices of these products also must be sufficient to recover all other costs incurred by the United States Mint, such as the cost of minting, marketing, and distributing such products (including labor, materials, dies, use of machinery, and promotional and overhead expenses).
This pricing methodology will allow the United States Mint to change the prices of these products as often as weekly so they better reflect the costs of platinum and gold on the open markets.
Provided the average price of gold remains between $850 and $899.99, the price of the coin will be $1,239.00.

U.S. Mint Director Ed Moy has announced that the U.S. Mint will issue a recreation of the famous and beloved Ultra-High Relief Saint-Gaudens $20 Double Eagle gold piece in 2009. The special issue coins will be struck in solid 24-karat gold on 27 mm blanks that I would expect to at least a quarter of an inch or more in thickness.When the original Ultra-High Relief Saints were struck in 1907, the Mint had a very difficult time striking them as the coin’s designer, Augustus Saint-Gaudens, intended them to appear. According to Walter Breen’s Complete Encyclopedia of U.S. and Colonial Coins, it took nine striking blows of the coining press, at an immense hydraulic force of 172 tons of pressure, to bring up the detail on the Ultra-High Relief Double Eagles. Between each strike, the coin had to be removed from the press and annealed, a process which softens the coin blank so that it takes the impression from the dies more completely.
Then the blank had to be carefully replaced in the coin press, aligned exactly as before, for the next striking blow. On the final blow, the edge lettering was imparted via a tripartite (three part) collar die. (The collar is the round base that confines the metal of the coin blank during striking so that the coin stays perfectly round and of uniform size. It is sometimes called the “third die,” just as the edge of a coin is often called the “third side” of a coin. On most U.S. coins, the collar die is either plain or reeded.)
Source: coins.about.com
Among the production specifications approved by Secretary Paulson are the new coin’s business-strike finish and a diameter of 27 millimeters. Only 2009-dated coins will be minted. The coins will go on sale in early 2009, although sales may continue into 2010 if inventory exists.