As i was going through my pennies i discovered this one. It is a steel penny with i think (and i am sure no expert) it think might be copper maybe some other metal from when the blanks were pored. but what do you think?
That picture is way to small to tell anything. My guess would be that if it is steel it is probably rusty(from what I can tell in the picture). Also, as an FYI, blanks aren't poured. They are stamped out of a huge sheet of metal.
Also, as an FYI, blanks aren't poured. They are stamped out of a huge sheet of metal.[/quote] right but they have to melt the metal to get the blanks and in that process could some copper stuck out? And as for the picture i know its small. I am unsure how to make it big. I have tried and tried but just can't do it. Oh and it does not look like rust. Its more of a copper color. Put next to a Lincoln copper cent the colors almost match.
If it is a 43 steel then there wouldn't be any copper involved in the process so I don't know how some would have gotten in. Did you scan the coin or take a picture? If you scanned it I would try taking a picture and uploading it that way. Until you get bigger pictures there is no way anyone can help more. Sorry :/
I did a scan of it. On my computer i can zoom in on the picture but it wont save zoomed in. I will try a cell phone.
There are '43 copper cents, but obviously they are quite rare. easiest test is the magnet test. If it sticks to a magnet, it is steal. If not, it is copper and worth lots of money.
its steel i just think somehow a chunk of copper got onto it. I have seen rusty 1943 cents and this color is not a rust color or at least not a color i have ever seen.
I am not too sure that you are right. But i am not too sure what would cause rust to turn a copper color. Like i said put next to a Lincoln cent the copper colors about match.
a lot of steel cents were copper coated by people thinking they could pass them off as a rare copper '43.
this is not coated. It looks more like some copper was mixed in with the steel during the process somehow.
this may be a retained struck thru where a small piece of copper got struck into the coin or maybe it is a small piece from a brass welding rod.
From the photo it looks like the entire coin is corroded and rusty. I think what the OP is asking about is the copper color spot in the center of the coin. I'm thinking it may be a small weld spot from a brass rod.
From a 1961 issue of coin magazine advertisement. I would guess there are thousands still out there, complete or corroded with only portions remaining.