What you have is called a False Double Rim - A lot of them were minted in the early 1970's.. I collect these. I don't have a 1982, NICE!
No. A Collar Clash is only found on coins that have a Reeded Edge. Where you see the reeding on the inner clashed edge for example - I want to share this webpage with you - http://maddieclashes.com/collar-clash.html
Good pictures, but those are of a reeded collar clash. The Op's coin is a smooth collar clash. Should I look up a website for your reference? The give away is the the diameter of the clash is larger than the rim which will show it crossing over the edge.
That is what I'm trying to explain. Dimes, Quarters and Halves have reeds so they will have the Collar Clash as in my picture. The OP's Cent is different since it does not have reeds so you don't call it a Reeded Collar Clash but simply a False Double Rim. Here is a great article written by Mike Diamond last year explaining what's happening. I want to share this webpage with you - https://www.coinworld.com/insights/_double-rims_-and-false-rims-arise-in-many-circumstances.html# I also want to share these pictures with explanation from this same article -
The inside diameter of the collar is larger than the diameter of the rim. When the die clashes the collar, the collar being larger than the die, it will leave details that run off the rim. This is the reason that those details don't go all the way around the rim, only about a quarter or less of the way around a coin will show the collar clash. All coins, readed or smooth edged, can and do have collar clashes. If the rim were doubled, the doubling diameter would be the same or close to the inside diameter of the rim and in most cases cross over the edge of the rim on the inside as your smooth edged picture does. The OPs coin has the clash details on the outside of the rim that run off the outside edge of the coin just like your reeded edge clash picture. I don't have to leave this site to see that.