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Old 02-11-2010, 08:43 PM
a761506 a761506 is offline
Josh Alpert
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Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Michigan
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I didn't see this until now, but the 63 Spahn initially in question is definitely authentic.

The 63 Bazooka set was only counterfeited as singles. The counterfeiter put them into slabs identified by FGA, MGS & Capital. They are simple to identify.

The borders on all of the counterfeit examples come to a perfect "L" shape at each corner and all border dashes are of equal length. The Spahn pictured in the post direct above this one is an example of one of those counterfeits. The authentic cards were all issued only in panel form, with dashes of varying lengths along each edge, and only the left-most card on a panel has "L" shaped corners on the upper & lower left corners, and vice versa for the right-most card on the panel.

Then, someone else, in their infinite wisdom, decided that since the set had already been poorly counterfeited, they would attempt to one-up them by essentially making color copies of the cards and pasting them onto cardboard. While the idea seems plausible, it didn't work out so hot, as the cards do not copy well (or a really crappy printer was used) so all of those fakes look like cheap color copies with a blurred image.

1963 Bazooka cards with no borders at all should be avoided, plus the fact that they are pretty much worthless when missing border dashes. However, beyond that, there is no reason to be scared when buying these cards now that you know exactly what to look for.
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