1986p Jeff with "sun rays"

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Geod, May 24, 2017.

  1. Geod

    Geod Member

    What causes these lines?

    WIN_20170524_17_34_53_Pro.jpg WIN_20170524_17_35_06_Pro.jpg WIN_20170524_17_35_13_Pro.jpg WIN_20170524_17_35_27_Pro.jpg WIN_20170524_17_35_57_Pro.jpg WIN_20170524_17_36_34_Pro.jpg WIN_20170524_17_36_41_Pro.jpg WIN_20170524_17_36_53_Pro.jpg WIN_20170524_17_36_58_Pro.jpg WIN_20170524_17_37_09_Pro.jpg
     
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  3. Lehigh96

    Lehigh96 Toning Enthusiast

    Looks like die wear to me, but that is a Rosie, not a Jeff.
     
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  4. Geod

    Geod Member

    DUH All those presidents look alike to me LOL
     
  5. jester3681

    jester3681 Exonumia Enthusiast

    I agree with @Lehigh96 - those look like die flow lines. Very late state on that Roosk!
     
  6. Dough

    Dough My brain is open

    Same for my Indian Cent? I thought I might be looking at dental tool whizzing.

    1897 1c ms64+bn - 32.jpg
     
  7. lordmarcovan

    lordmarcovan 48-year collector Moderator

    Same for the Indian cent. Flow lines. Totally natural. Kind of neat, actually.

    I like the "sun rays" metaphor. Wouldn't have thought about describing that way, but it's a fairly apt description.
     
  8. ed wood 654

    ed wood 654 Grader & Entrepreneur /Aviation Executive

    What you are looking at is most likely die wear.
     
  9. green18

    green18 Unknown member Sweet on Commemorative Coins

    He didn't say flow lines. He said die wear. Flow lines would emanate out like a droplet in a puddle of water.......
     
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  10. jester3681

    jester3681 Exonumia Enthusiast

    Absolutely right. I must have seen what I wanted to when I read that...
     
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  11. physics-fan3.14

    physics-fan3.14 You got any more of them.... prooflikes?

    Yes, this pattern is from die wear. It is common, and occurs on any die which was used past where it should have been.
     
  12. Dough

    Dough My brain is open

    Thank you.

    I knew worn out and overused dies could show as cracks (1866 1c), grain (1960 5c), and mushy lettering (1964 25c).

    Now that I know about this I can stop thinking some sad coin doctor spent a day whizzing a common date Indian Cent with a dental tool to pull it up to 63 RB. :)
     

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  13. eddiespin

    eddiespin Fast Eddie

    That 1898 is a beauty! That's a lovely-looking crack on her tails end, too!
     
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