"Nah, I think the problem (mine, at least) has been your refusal or inability to explain the authentication, to point to something, anything, that the authenticators saw that led them to consider it genuine. Had you done that, discussion could perhaps have focused on substance. Instead, you kept listing things that one could look at in the absence of a match with an actual stamp/punch, not what the "experts" actually did see in the case of this coin"
I thought that this had been explained ad nauseum; in simple, plain language: the coin exhibits no break in the patination at and around the counterstamping; the coin had its "original skin"; the verdigris in the devices is natural to the coin; the natural wear at the edge and other areas of higher than field wear-these are all visual and accepted as OK by those who know nothing about the punch's history-just facts based on the merits of the coin. That is, it was treated as just another counterstamped coin, and nothing was seen amiss.
Further inspection and vis a vis with other punchings by the maker seen on his guns shows that there are exacting similarities between the counterstamp on the coin and those of some guns (Guilt by Association). It would be very nice if an exact match could be made, yet we have no idea for how long a time punches were expected to last, how many were made and used, etc. Just because an exact match could not be made at this time does not preclude that it is not a genuine J.J. Henry article. Who knows? Maybe the punch broke at the "Y"? No one knows and no one will ever know anything other than the physical attributes and evidence of the item at hand. The physical evidence, plain to anyone who has viewed it "live" and knows what he's talking about, overwhelming points to a genuine-of-the-period item. To just dismiss what "The Experts" know about this as Poppycock shows, well, nevermind. It is realized that many on here have never been exposed to Numismatics in any other-than-ordinary way, so the protestations by those people expressed here can be forgiven. I would just caution, though, that professing something here as Fact when that case is just not so, is detrimental to the poster, the readers, and the site itself.