Does anybody know what causes those parallel ridges (almost a ruffled potato chip look)? Ridges run at a 45 degree angle from the upper right to the lower left on the coin below. Can a coin's surface fold/distort when being struck? Ridges only appear in the field and not on the devices.
I would say it's on the blank before striking. When the metal flows to create the coins information, it's erased. Maybe something from polishing the blank itself? It sort of looks like a "Got Wood" coin.
The ridges are too far apart and too wide to be die polish lines, and roller marks typically do show on the devices as well as the fields, but I agree it is a planchet issue of some kind, just not sure what.
These are striation lines in the copper plating. They are basically the equivalent of linear plating blisters.
If we examined it up close, we could very well see them on the devices, but it's not uncommon for such plating lines to be absent or significantly diminished on the devices.
But blisters, which is what you mentioned in your first post, blisters would not be diminished. If anything they would likely break and expose the underlying zinc since the plating is so thin. So I find plating blisters unlikely.
Except in cases of split plating(which is a separate matter altogether) it is rare to find blisters and bubbling that have broken. I would assume the reason for this is that they arise during the strike(presumably from the heat and pressures involved)-they are not on the planchet before the strike.