1946 Penny Die Crack

Discussion in 'Error Coins' started by JPAUL, Mar 24, 2013.

  1. JPAUL

    JPAUL Member

    Hey guys take a look at this cent there's two cracks and what appears to be a small gold cud over liberty. Obverse 1.jpg Obverse 2.jpg Obverse 3.jpg Reverse 1.jpg
     
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  3. cpm9ball

    cpm9ball CANNOT RE-MEMBER

    I don't see a cud along the rim. The radial cracks are pretty neat, but I don't think they would carry much of a premium.

    Chris
     
  4. non_cents

    non_cents Well-Known Member

    I agree with Chris.
    Also, cents, not "pennies".;)
    Keep up the hunt!
     
  5. yakpoo

    yakpoo Member

    I love coins with die cracks, but I doubt they carry much of a premium...except when they're used as a diagnostic to identify some rare die pair (e.g. 1804 C-5 half cent).

    [​IMG]
     
  6. jay4202472000

    jay4202472000 Well-Known Member

    I like it. I would pay a couple of bucks for it. If you pulled it from circulation, $2 would be a 2000% profit. I guess that counts as a small premium!
     
  7. JPAUL

    JPAUL Member

    The small blob that is covering the L and i of liberty would that be considered a die chip? Obverse 2.jpg Obverse 3.jpg
     
  8. jay4202472000

    jay4202472000 Well-Known Member

    It appears to me to be right before the piece broke off of the die, which would produce a cud when it eventually did. Not a cud/chip yet though. It looks like it is a crack too. You can even see a crack down the face of the rim. If it was a cud there would be a raised blob of metal there where the piece of the die broke away. I love this coin, even if it has been cleaned! It is a messed up beauty!
     
  9. non_cents

    non_cents Well-Known Member

    I think there was some grime in that location, so while the rest of the coin toned, the area underneath there remained the same color. So when the piece of debris fell off, it revealed the color underneath. I don't think it's a retained cud or a die crack, as I am not seeing any evidence of die cracking in that area.
    In fact, on a second look, I think that this coin has been plated outside the mint. The elements are mushy and thick, and lack detail. I think the "die cracks" are just normal cracks that occurred on the plating...so, PMD in my honest opinion.
     
  10. iGradeMS70

    iGradeMS70 AKA BustHalfBrian

    Not a die crack, IMHO. It looks more like a planchet flaw - not a die flaw.

    It was struck through a retained (attached) lamination.
     
  11. jay4202472000

    jay4202472000 Well-Known Member

    That's why you are the expert. I didn't think about that until you said it. I have a '55 wheatie that was plated and half of the plating is gone. I just dug it out and looked at it. Mine doesn't look exactly the same, but very similar. (Mine looks a lot crappier, no cool colors at all) I think this is a very plausible answer.
     
  12. non_cents

    non_cents Well-Known Member

    The thing that first made me think the coin was plated was that despite it having a beautiful color, the thicker, mushier letters led me to believe that it was circulated. You can't have amazing colors on a coin so circulated that it loses its detail. I recall having a plated coin with a similar appearance and similar plating anomalies.
     
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