1994 D dime. Believeing it is a improperly annealed

Discussion in 'Error Coins' started by Shrews1994, Sep 7, 2018.

  1. Shrews1994

    Shrews1994 Collecting is my passion.

    It is black on both sides. In the picture it's grey. RoundPhoto_Sep072018_091848.png RoundPhoto_Sep072018_091910.png CM180907-092011001.jpg
     
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  3. Shrews1994

    Shrews1994 Collecting is my passion.

    I don't have another 1994 dime. Can't compare the two. But have other dimes. That is a totally different color.
     
  4. CoinBlazer

    CoinBlazer Numismatic Enthusiast

    most likely circam or just dark toning. Unless you can obtain better pictures
     
  5. Shrews1994

    Shrews1994 Collecting is my passion.

    CM180907-093951001.jpg CM180907-094009002.jpg
     
    CoinBlazer likes this.
  6. Shrews1994

    Shrews1994 Collecting is my passion.

  7. CoinBlazer

    CoinBlazer Numismatic Enthusiast

  8. Michael K

    Michael K Well-Known Member

    Yours is most likely environmentally damaged.
    It has been said that:
    Well, for one, environmentally damaged coins don't have much - if any - Mint luster
    Here is J Cro's improperly annealed dime, you can see the difference.
    2001 D 10c Improp Annealed OBV.JPG 2001 D 10c Improp Annealed REV.JPG
     
    JCro57, Spark1951 and Tim Lackie Jr like this.
  9. Clawcoins

    Clawcoins Damaging Coins Daily

    Would the rim on her dime also be a giveaway that it's environmental damage, as the rim is normal colored. Which if there was an annealing problem would it be coin-wide not just "most of it" ??

    Plus the other items you mentioned.
     
  10. Michael K

    Michael K Well-Known Member

    Fred Weinberg mentioned the rim as a key marker to see if something is
    improperly annealed, or ED. (AND OF COURSE I FORGOT EXACTLY WHAT HE SAID TO LOOK FOR.) It's in a thread here somewhere.
    But the luster or lack of luster is also a marker.
     
    Oldhoopster likes this.
  11. Clawcoins

    Clawcoins Damaging Coins Daily

    searched ..
    thread:
    https://www.cointalk.com/threads/20...sland-improper-annealing.307775/#post-2941734
    post:
    https://www.cointalk.com/threads/20...sland-improper-annealing.307775/#post-2941734

    copied text:
    I could immediately tell it was a
    genuine mis-annealed planchet because:

    Every single 'mis-annealed' coin that someone
    has shown me at a coin show, or in an email, that
    turns out to be environmentally damaged or played with,
    has a darker duller surface than it should have, AND
    every single non-error has the same dark color
    on the reeded EDGE of the coin.

    See the edge photo (#3) - it looks like a normal
    BU Quarter - the copper core shows a nice normal
    red color - that's because although the planchet
    itself (on a genuine mis-annealed planchet)
    would have the dark color on the smooth edge,
    once it's struck in the collar, and ejected, that
    dark color is removed from the reeding due to
    the ejection of the now-coin from the collar.

    (I could also tell it's real from the surfaces themselves, -
    although mis-annealing leaves a range of 'darknesss',
    seeing the reeding as a normal red copper color is one
    of the keys to know it hasn't been played with)


    Hope this helps - it's a good authentication point
    to check, if you're not sure of a 'darker' color coin
    is truly mis-annealed/improperly annealed, or has
    been played with after the coin was in circulation.
     
    Spark1951, Oldhoopster and Michael K like this.
  12. Real Slick

    Real Slick Active Member

    learned and elp me i.d. like coin
     
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