Silver penny?

Discussion in 'Error Coins' started by parkerdude, Apr 22, 2015.

?

Any ideas on what happened here?

  1. Mint error

    4 vote(s)
    66.7%
  2. post mint

    2 vote(s)
    33.3%
  1. parkerdude

    parkerdude Member

    Not sure what happened here...
     

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  3. Amos 811

    Amos 811 DisMember

    Either the copper never was applied, or it was re-coated in zinc.
     
  4. tommyc03

    tommyc03 Senior Member

    Think it could have survived in circulation that long and look that good? Hmmm...
     
  5. cpm9ball

    cpm9ball CANNOT RE-MEMBER

    What does it weigh?

    Chris
     
  6. Ed23

    Ed23 Active Member

    Most likely its copper plating was removed in an acid bath.
     
  7. Amos 811

    Amos 811 DisMember

    I find BU 80s every day CRH.
     
    tommyc03 likes this.
  8. Bucephalus

    Bucephalus Active Member

    Middle school science class; electroplating. Found a wheat penny like that in my till once. Worth 1¢.
     
  9. tommyc03

    tommyc03 Senior Member

    I do also. Seems ever since the crash of 2008 there has been more and more BU coins being dumped into the system. Which of course is good for us roll searchers.
     
  10. Old Error Guy

    Old Error Guy Well-Known Member

    I'll be the first to admit a lack of knowledge here. I'm wondering what those that are convinced it is not a genuine error are seeing that convinces them of that. There are genuine unplated coins, both struck and blank, certified as errors and unquestionably they do exist.
     
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  11. tommyc03

    tommyc03 Senior Member

    I agree, I would not toss it w/o getting a pro inspection first. What we see in a pic here does not mean it is not something else.
     
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  12. eddiespin

    eddiespin Fast Eddie

    I don't think they made silver cents, Chris.
     
  13. KurtS

    KurtS Die variety collector

    Agreed--it's hard to say from this picture; an inspection by an expert is the way to do it.
     
  14. cpm9ball

    cpm9ball CANNOT RE-MEMBER

    I know. I'm just trying to show the OP that the weight can prove that it has been coated post-Mint.

    Chris
     
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  15. cpm9ball

    cpm9ball CANNOT RE-MEMBER

    They are not as common as you might think.

    Chris
     
  16. eddiespin

    eddiespin Fast Eddie

    Plating irregularities occurred at the Mint. There are a lot of 1997-Ds for example that were inadvertently plated in brass. This coin could be a plating irregularity. I'm not saying it is that, but I'm not saying it's not.
     
    tommyc03 likes this.
  17. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    There are cents plated in "brass" every year. It's just a matter of using the plating solution too long. It gets contaminated with some dissolved zinc with every batch of planchets plated. That zinc also plates out on the coin. Eventually there is enoigh zinc in the solution that the plating starts taking on a yellow color.

    And the plating is done by an outside contractor, they aren't really a mint error.

    Yes cents exist that missed the plating process, but when new they have the same cartwheel luster that a new copper plated cent has. Once the coin circulates a litte and the surface oxidizes or corrodes, it becomes impossible to tell if the coin started out as an unplated cent, or if it has been zinc plated, or had the copper plating stripped off.
     
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