I will for sure. It will fit in well with all my other worthless interesting finds that take up too much space
Forgive me, but why, if it's machine doubling, is only the face doubled? Why isn't the date and legend doubled? Both are punched on the die that the face is, and machine doubling would, to me, double all aspects, not just one. Why only the face and not the legend? I'm trying to learn, so educate me.
I have a Sac very similar to this but not able to get a good photo currently. For "fity" cents I'd keep it.
Great question. The short answer is that machine doubling doesn't have to happen on the entire coin; it can happen in particular areas or everywhere. This is a good resource for errors: http://lincolncentresource.com/FAQ/machinedoubling.html
After some thought I think I have a pretty good answer for this. Remember when you were younger and you had one of these? I think it's a lot like if you were to push your face into one of these (you know you tried that, lol), pulled away a little bit and moved over just a hair and went back in only not as far this time. Some of the pins would be pushed but not all of them. Your nose would probably hit first. I guess the same thing happens with mechanical doubling. Hope this helps.
dam it I will have machine doubling my way you all dont know wth your talking about unless its machine doubling then I dont care and here is another
It would be fun to collect coins with profile doubling as bold as that. They have a bit more than just face value. Fun stuff.
The funny thing is, on some series machine doubling is collectible and will raise the value. We don't talk about that much here, because it is uncommon. The Capped Bust Halves are one of the few series where it is desirable, when it is extreme. Some dates are known with completely doubled profiles, like the one Larry posted (1823 is the most common of these). To specialists, these are interesting and collectible. Unfortunately, CBH's are the only series I know of where this is true. My example is below: