I can help with some better images . For now, check out this site . http://www.doubleddie.com/307701.html
These are prime examples of Wexler varieties that I do not see as real doubled dies, or so microscopic as to not count.
Rick, how much would a collector of such pay for a doubled working hub coin compared to say DD found in CPG , Authoritative Reference on Lincoln Cents ( wexler co-authored),or even on Coppercoins.com. I am not being snarky, I don't deal with them and can't recall seeing any labelled as such even on eBay. Everyone is certainly entitled to collect them , but if they are told they are such, will they understand the difference or just advertise it as a DDO on ebay? I am sure Kurt will say I never agree with him , but I had to agree with him in this thread. Jim
The easy way to answer this to me . When I was a little boy, I use to go to my grand parent house and watch my grand mother wash and dry laundry . My grand mother had a wash board, she would wash the laundry . Then she would run then threw a ringer . Last, she would take them outside and hang them on a line to dry . Today we just throw them in the wash machine and start the machine . Same with the dryer . The bottom line, both produced clean and dry laundry .
I understood perfectly. I watched my grandmother do the same thing. Her washer was a large free standing tub. lol
Of course you don't understand . You don't know much about varieties and the classification of them . A variety, is a variety . Doesn't matter how, it became a variety ..