1988 smooth Lincoln head cent

Discussion in 'Error Coins' started by Sheila Ruley, Apr 26, 2016.

  1. Sheila Ruley

    Sheila Ruley The short blonde girl

    image.jpeg image.jpeg image.jpeg ok, all the lettering on both sides is fine and well stamped. What could have caused a smooth Lincoln head only? PMD? Grease filled die? It has no signs of filing or polishing done to it that I can tell. Can anyone tell me what this is?
     
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  3. Treashunt

    Treashunt The Other Frank

    it could be a struck thru
     
  4. cpm9ball

    cpm9ball CANNOT RE-MEMBER

    Don't forget that this is a Zincoln. To me, the pock marks suggest environmental damage.

    Chris
     
  5. Sheila Ruley

    Sheila Ruley The short blonde girl

    Yes, that's why I asked if it could be PMD. I have looked at strike throughs and it resembles some of them, but I'm just not sure what it is.
     
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  6. TJ1952

    TJ1952 Well-Known Member

    Almost like a struck thru cloth plus slight misalignment.
     
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  7. Sheila Ruley

    Sheila Ruley The short blonde girl

    Would a strike through make it worth anything?
     
  8. TJ1952

    TJ1952 Well-Known Member

    Well, at least 1 cent....kidding.

    Not really. Not unless it's a major/distinctive struck thru error on a MS-69 coin. Or you find an error collector that wants it.
     
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  9. Sheila Ruley

    Sheila Ruley The short blonde girl

    Ok. Cool. Thanks.
     
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  10. old49er

    old49er Well-Known Member

    Hi,cool I like it. I have a lot of Lincoln cent irregular stuff. Like grease struck through, off center, wagonwheel rims, bignose, wheatear,...Ect... anyways I love the lincoln cent errors too..i have a lot of them. many are one of a kind. seems an endless parade of mint errors before the modern cents. keep looking and keep up the search...
     
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  11. old49er

    old49er Well-Known Member

    nice railroad rim on obverse
     
    Last edited: Apr 26, 2016
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  12. old49er

    old49er Well-Known Member

    misaligned die, and weak flow of metal on strike .non filling the die due to the offstrike ,not creating enough pressure. and perhaps damage after strike as mentioned
     
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  13. Sheila Ruley

    Sheila Ruley The short blonde girl

    That's awesome you have all those!
     
  14. Sheila Ruley

    Sheila Ruley The short blonde girl

    Thanks. That explains a lot.
     
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  15. TJ1952

    TJ1952 Well-Known Member

    Yes, a parade of errors. Especially from Philly!

    I'd like to see some of your one of a kind. Start a new thread and post some of them.
     
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  16. old49er

    old49er Well-Known Member

    OK I will give me a few ...if I could start a thread. don't have access to post a message I guess. how do I post a message
     
  17. old49er

    old49er Well-Known Member

    I love no mint marks ,espescially the p although I do have a few
     
  18. TJ1952

    TJ1952 Well-Known Member

    I will private message you. Stby....
     
  19. Stoneman2

    Stoneman2 New Member

    This is not a railroad rim. A railroad rim refers to a partial collar strike where the collar does not deploy far enough.
     
  20. Stoneman2

    Stoneman2 New Member

    This one is quite odd.
    While I agree environmental damage has occurred at the pits I don't think that type of damage can be blamed for everything. The slightly misaligned strike would have no impact on the strength of the strike in the center of the coin. Furthermore if this were an example of a weakly struck coin the weak strike would be evident on the reverse which it isn't.
    If this lack of detail were caused by PSD then the roller lines going through the flat area would have been eradicated .
    Not sure what this one is but I would hang on to it till I was sure.
     
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  21. mikediamond

    mikediamond Coin Collector

    The pits were not caused by environmental damage. This is a grease strike and the pits were caused by grit stuck in the grease layer.
     
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