My Question(s) about 1970 quarter (lightweight)

Discussion in 'Error Coins' started by ace71499, Aug 12, 2013.

  1. ace71499

    ace71499 Young Numismatic

    Ok so hello everybody! Im a newbew, young coin collector and am just a little confused on a few coins. Im hoping you guys can help me! Ok so i was looking through my 1979 and below quarters (ive been starting out by saving everything 1979 and below from the rolls of coins i get (besides halves and dollar coins) and one of my 1970 quarters was significantly lighter than all of the other 1970 quarters. What i have found from my trusty RedBook was that the quarter was actually printed on metal for dimes, but thats all i could find anywhere even on google. Does anyone else have any info they could share with me? and if you could tell me the approxamate value that would be nice. Sorry about my picture taking skills :)
     

    Attached Files:

  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. rickmp

    rickmp Frequently flatulent.

    I can't tell, but I'd assume that the edge is reeded. Definitely not on a dime planchet. How much does it weigh?

    Looking at this and your other posts, I can assume that you don't have a Red Book? Lots of info in a Red Book.
     
  4. jallengomez

    jallengomez Cessna 152 Jockey

    As far as I can see, there's nothing unusual about the coin. What is the weight of the quarter?
     
  5. ace71499

    ace71499 Young Numismatic

    @rickmp
    I have a red book and it says "lightweight, thin quarters of 1970-D are errors struck on METAL intended for dimes" It was printed on something intended for quarters just using the wrong metal. the redbook doesn't have any more information on that and I was hoping you guys would have some.
    @jallengomez
    It weighs about 5.5 grams.
     
  6. jallengomez

    jallengomez Cessna 152 Jockey

    I'm not a quarter person, but I would think 5.5 grams would be close to being within the normal tolerance range. It could possibly be struck on a slightly thin planchet. Wrong metal is certainly not the only reason a coin could be underweight.
     
  7. ToughCOINS

    ToughCOINS Dealer Member Moderator

    The coin looks fully enough struck that it would not be on a planchet other than intended for a quarter.
     
  8. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    At 5.5 grams it would just be a little outside of tolerance so this is not a quarter struck on dime stock. A quarter on dime stock would weigh about 4.2 grams.
     
  9. AWORDCREATED

    AWORDCREATED Hardly Noticeable

    ... double post, how do I delete this?
     
  10. AWORDCREATED

    AWORDCREATED Hardly Noticeable

    1970 dime should weigh 2.27 grams, yes?
     
  11. d.t.menace

    d.t.menace Member

    Yes, but.
    Conder didn't say it was struck on a dime planchet. He was referring to a quarter planchet on dime stock.
     
  12. desertgem

    desertgem Senior Errer Collecktor Supporter

    Breen gives the tolerances on the clad quarter as 5.67 +- .227grams which would make the minimum 5.443 grams , less than the 5.5 grams mentioned
     
  13. AWORDCREATED

    AWORDCREATED Hardly Noticeable

    Thanks for clearing that up. Stock of material fed into the planchet circle maker, not stock of planchets.
     
  14. bryantallard

    bryantallard show me the money....so i can look through it

    could be struck on a foreign planchet?
     
  15. ken454

    ken454 Well-Known Member

    according to "strike it rich" book, a quarter struck on dime stock should weigh between 4.2 and 4.4 grams
     
  16. jallengomez

    jallengomez Cessna 152 Jockey

    As Desertgem pointed out, it's within mint tolerance. Nothing to see here. Move along.
     
    rickmp likes this.
  17. 19Lyds

    19Lyds Member of the United States of Confusion

    To add some clarity to what you've stated, the quarter planchets were punch from stock that had a thickness intended for the CnClad Dimes. The metal was correct but the thickness was not.

    These coins have a noticeable lack of detail near the edges of the coin due to a lack of metal flow to those outer areas.

    Here's one:

    Washington 1970-D Dime Thickness Stock Coin.jpg

    Washington 1970-D Dime Thickness Stock Slab Obv.jpg Washington 1970-D Dime Thickness Stock Slab Rev.jpg

    Judging from the OP's photo's, I don't think that he has one of these coins.
     
  18. Nevadabell

    Nevadabell A picture of me.

    Lighter usually means that the coin has been dipped in acid. It's probably worth face value.
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page