Here's what a normal one looks like and pay attention to the upper windows . Here's some side by sides and again, pay attention to the upper windows . Here's the link to wexler site . http://www.doubleddie.com/154201.html
We get people, here, complaining all the time about the grading services coming up with specialty inserts just to sell their services, yet no one says a thing about these attribution services that use a Hubble telescope to find these errors. Why is that? Chris
Hey, I have no trouble with assigning this a variety. With a feature this microscopic, I'd never be able to distinguish it from strike doubling on a single coin, but if they've found a number of coins with exactly the same feature, I guess that implies it's on the die, and therefore a variety. It's just a bit obsessively detail-focused for even my personality type, and that would seem to be saying a lot.
Here's another one and here's a normal image . Here's the doubled die one, with some more side by sides .
Because there is no limit, to how many X can be used on varieties . I can see everything with a 10x too ..
I would never buy one and I seen some on ebay for 20 bucks . All of them are change finds for me, from 2009 too ...