1995 d double die??

Discussion in 'Error Coins' started by Karen Hubbard, Jan 18, 2018.

  1. Karen Hubbard

    Karen Hubbard New Member

    So I have only just begun to learn about error coins, so I could really use some help , to understand if this is a 1995 d double die penny , or if it is something else. I have googled myself crazy looking at pictures and reading articles. So any clarification as to if it is or isn't, and how to identify properly, would be so wonderfully appreciated. I will post several pictures ......
     

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  3. paddyman98

    paddyman98 I'm a professional expert in specializing! Supporter

    Your Cent is a Copper Plated Zinc Cent.. When the Die gets overused and worn you will see doubling on the date. This is referred to as DDD - Die Deterioration Doubling.
    It has nothing to do withh Hub Doubling referred to as a Doubled Die.
     
    eddiespin likes this.
  4. Fred Weinberg

    Fred Weinberg Well-Known Member

    Hard to tell from the photos, but it
    might also be the copper coating
    'splitting' apart - a very very common
    occurance.
     
    Kentucky and eddiespin like this.
  5. Karen Hubbard

    Karen Hubbard New Member

    Do you know if there is an app that might help me take better close up pics???
     
  6. paddyman98

    paddyman98 I'm a professional expert in specializing! Supporter

    Why? It's not a true Doubled Die.

    Best thing is to use your cellphone camera. Take a nice picture not to close. Then use a picture cropping app to just crop the coin and then it will be enlarged.
     
  7. Karen Hubbard

    Karen Hubbard New Member

  8. eddiespin

    eddiespin Fast Eddie

    @Karen Hubbard, I like how you've got the three coins lined up, I used to do that, too, just like that. What you have is nothing, however you want to diagnose it. It's simply a consequence of how that planchet took that strike by that die.
     
  9. paddyman98

    paddyman98 I'm a professional expert in specializing! Supporter

    Here is an example. I took an old picture of coins I metal detected then just cropped the center coin.
    20180101_084037-1.jpg 20180101_084037-1-1.jpg
     
    352sdeer likes this.
  10. Oldhoopster

    Oldhoopster Member of the ANA since 1982

    The 1995 DDO (doubled die obverse) that has some value looks like this
    upload_2018-1-18_17-58-21.jpeg
    (pic from PCGS Coinfacts)

    You don't have this coin
     
    352sdeer likes this.
  11. Cheech9712

    Cheech9712 Every thing is a guess

    Hi Karen. Karen here!! Alot of coins look doubled. Most coins produced have some type of machine doubling. Keep trying as i do also. Most at coin talk will help you. Just remember one thing. If members tell you it's not a doubled die. Believe. They know their stuff. So keep on with the chace. The fun and rewards are great. Plus some interesting conversations. Wait till you meet green18 or kurt. They crack me up. Have fun and keep digging. Karen. Aka Cheech
     
  12. Karen Hubbard

    Karen Hubbard New Member

    THANKS EVERYONE FOR HELPING, AND TEACHING ME
     
  13. 352sdeer

    352sdeer Collecting Lincoln cents for 50 years!

    Hello @Karen Hubbard
    Welcome to CT!

    The type of doubling you have is common. You will find many coins that exhibit Die Deterioration Doubling some very lightly like yours and others very pronounced like my coin. You would not think the second coin image is the same type of error. Check out doubledies.com
    592167D7-9CD0-43A5-8802-0D8FA7863A1C.jpeg 088220E4-64BE-4923-833B-AFC54A5F6ACF.jpeg Hope this helps, Reed
     
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