Tom, this looks very interesting to me! Are they raised? Also, do they look like they abraded away a clash?
The reverse looks like it's from a heavily polished die, but I don't see any evidence of a clash. Chris
Jay they are raised. They aren't bubbles. In the right (wrong?) light they look like detailed columns. They almost disappear when the light is in a certain direction, so not very prominent. The one on the right side of the last column is interesting too. Aren't they usually only inside the columns if they are DDR's?
What if it's a new variety? It could be a new reverse variety, or a die clash or something interesting. One more thing for people to collect.
If i wasted 15-20 min for $1, I would never look for another good Cent again! The copper ones are adding up, but they take no time to toss in a jar...photos, listing, ebay customers not satisfied, sending you back a different Cent...not worth it!
I guess it would depend on your income. I'm sitting here watching tv anyways. a few extra dollars here and there helps me buy pieces for collection. I guess I just want those collection pieces bad enough
All i see are verticle 'scratches', no outlines of the pillars, nothing on the rest of the coin. All the Cents i place under a 50x show the same 'grain'.
I can't see searching pennies anymore. there are SO many more errors in quarters. cuds, retained cuds, DDR's, off centers, partial collars. the pennies are far and few in between. plus the silver. and I have NEVER found a key date :-(
@bryan, this started as a endeavor to stockpile as much copper as possible. I moved away from gold and silver. I collected coins as a child, my father has a huge collection. So, about a year ago, rather then turning in good zincs, i decided to learn about them. I know almost nothing about pre81s cause i save them all, and after a time comes when they become as rare as wheats...then i have thousands upon thousands to go thru and look at. These coppers will hit 10x fv within the next 10-20 years. We already hit 3.1x a few years back. Copper is required, where as silver and gold are more coveted.