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Well, it’s probably worth $2.95 plus postage. The coin is a "magician’s coin" – a novelty item.
"You’ll never lose a coin toss with this coin,"
Someone foolishly, or purposely spent his or her two headed coin and now you have it.
While it is true that 99.99999 % of all two-headed or two-tailed are manufactured novelty coins - genuine examples do exist. But they are beyond rare.
To the best of my knowledge there has been a grand total of 1 two-tailed Washingtom quarter - 1 two-headed Indian Head cent - and I believe 1 dime - though I'm not sure of the series or the side off the top of my head.
The odds of a collector finding a genuine example of one of these coins are astronomical.
They sell for a little more than a few dollars lately. There popularity has made them a requested coin at magicians stores. The nickels are about $5 and upward to the half dollar for $25. At least that is the prices at a store near me. One of thier biggest sellers. There is also the hollowed out Cent with a dime on the other side, hollowed out quarter with a nickel on the other side and a few others.
Lots of coin stores sell 'em but they do sell 'em as magician trick coins. The concept of making them is incredible . . . but with today's technology on machining a coin, you never know. There's absolutely no way by looking at it with the naked eye that it's not real.
__________________ There's absoluetly no problem that cannot be solved with the right amount of explosives! [SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]Sometimes U have to go out on the limb, after all that's where the fruit is!
Especially when you use it to flip coins. Just don't let your opponent ever see the coin. Lol.
__________________ There's absoluetly no problem that cannot be solved with the right amount of explosives! [SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]Sometimes U have to go out on the limb, after all that's where the fruit is!
Does anyone have a picture of an authenticated one?
__________________ Canadian Small cents : 108 /124 87% complete Check out The Small Cents! Canadian Large Cents: 43/56 76.7% complete Canadian Small cents MS: 63/124 50.7% complete
A 2-headed coin from recent times would be impossible, wouldn't it? Aren't both sides now struck at once? It would take a HUGE error (or an intentional event) to make one.
Years ago I was at a small coin shop (which sadly closed) and a bedazzled person came in. I was rummaging through some books and he walked up to me and said "do you collect coins?" I said "yeah." Then he showed me a Kennedy half - I don't remember the year. Then he turned it over and exposed a second "heads" side. Not wanting to diffuse him I said "Hm!" and continued rummaging. Thinking he had a great rarity, he berated the shop owner and said "a friend of mine looked at it under a scope and couldn't find anything unusual!" The owner nonchanlantly grabbed it and, within 5 seconds, pointed at the rather obvious seam. Then he said "it's impossible because both sides are struck at once." I kept my distance, but the guy left silently.
I'm sure every coin shop owner has a story like this.
A 2-headed coin from recent times would be impossible, wouldn't it? Aren't both sides now struck at once?
That's how coins have always been made. How could you strike only one side of a coin? (One side could be blank but it would still be struck - as a blank.)
Currency, on the other hand, is printed one side at a time (if I remember correctly).
__________________ "Descended from the apes! My dear, let us hope that it is not true, but if it is, let us pray that it will not become generally known.". The wife of the Bishop of Worcester to Charles Darwin
ANA LM-3799; OHNS LM-59; SUSCC R-4005. All coins stored in bank safe deposit box.
I have a 2 headed Morgan Dollar. My grandfather got it around 1945. It was made by a person in prison. He split the coins in halve and somehow got them back to gether. The reeded edges match perfectly and you can only see a dark center ring along the edge.
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