Susan B Anthony dufferent color

Discussion in 'Error Coins' started by Wayman, Jun 15, 2019.

  1. Wayman

    Wayman Active Member

    I get one Susan Dollar " uncirculated" and this coin have different color. All coins before was shiny and bright, this was gray and not shiny at all. It's that normal? IMG_20190615_104648.jpg IMG_20190615_104659.jpg IMG_20190615_104728.jpg IMG_20190615_104746.jpg
     
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  3. R_rabbit

    R_rabbit Well-Known Member

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  4. alurid

    alurid Well-Known Member

    I think it is just toning from being inside plastic for so long.
     
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  5. paddyman98

    paddyman98 I'm a professional expert in specializing! Supporter

    NO IT IS NOT MISSING THE CLAD LAYER! :facepalm:
    Your on a roll roday giving wrong information!

    Just normal toning!
     
  6. Pete Apple

    Pete Apple Well-Known Member

    Agree - not missing clad layer. Were it missing clad,

    Missing one clad layer weight approximately 5.8 g - 6.1 g
     
  7. Wayman

    Wayman Active Member

    Weight is 8.3 grams
    This is 1978 set, color is bright and nice. So i 15606178475161535239569.jpg guess, maybe air toning coin
     
  8. paddyman98

    paddyman98 I'm a professional expert in specializing! Supporter

    And would look like this..
    From my collection -
    607580-1.jpg Capture+_2018-10-24-11-24-42.png 607580-2-1.jpg
     
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  9. cpm9ball

    cpm9ball CANNOT RE-MEMBER

    Rabbit, it's good that you want to participate and help others, but when you are just making a wild guess, it is like trying to determine if a gun is loaded by looking down the barrel and pulling the trigger.

    Chris
     
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  10. R_rabbit

    R_rabbit Well-Known Member

    :)
    Sorry, just getting my cup of coffee,lol:happy:
    So, is it the air inside or rather air is let in that makes it tone?
     
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  11. R_rabbit

    R_rabbit Well-Known Member

    :)

    Here we go ,
    The occurrence happens most often with sulfur or oxygen. As that reaction occurs, a compound forms on the surface of the coin, gradually changing the color of the metal. The color change is a gradual process that typically takes years to fully develop.
     
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  12. Michael K

    Michael K Well-Known Member

    Absolutely not missing a clad layer. I noticed a number of 1979 coins. You do want to check for this rare variety on the 1979-P SBA. Wide rim, near date.
    1979-narrow-rim-vs-wide-rim-susan-b-anthony-dollar.jpg
     
    Last edited: Jun 15, 2019
  13. Seattlite86

    Seattlite86 Outspoken Member

    Please.... stop... giving... bad... advice... This coin is absolutely not missing its clad layer. You continue to tell people you think their coins are something they are not. You are going to mislead people here and cause them financial and emotional heartache. Please continue to study errors before commenting on them. I continue to provide you this feedback... and apparently so does @paddyman98
     
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  14. PlanoSteve

    PlanoSteve Well-Known Member

    It is for a "duffer", it's called the "dufferent" color, which is what you have.

    (In case no one noticed...I'm baaaack! :joyful::smuggrin::p:rolleyes::eek::oops::oops::cigar:)
     
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  15. cpm9ball

    cpm9ball CANNOT RE-MEMBER

    When did you leave?

    Chris;):hilarious:
     
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  16. R_rabbit

    R_rabbit Well-Known Member

    :)
    Hey, everyone is allowed to make mistakes. I always admit mine :happy:and I don’t berate people about their mistakes. It’s not kind.
    I like to learn from my mistakes.
     
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  17. Seattlite86

    Seattlite86 Outspoken Member

    No you don't. You keep making the same mistake over and over: giving advice on things you don't know enough about. Once or twice, that's fine, but this is such a pattern that now instead of sending you PMs like I've done in the past, I'm going bringing it up for everyone to see in hopes of it changing your behavior. If nothing else, it will help people understand that your advice is not to be heeded/trusted.

    And I understand you being upset about my repeated comments to you about doing this, but I'm not here to be "kind". I'm here to learn about coins and help other people learn about theirs. I continually find myself coming back behind you and telling others that what you said is completely incorrect. Your mistakes can end up hurting other people. I'd rather be mean than sit back and let someone be led astray.
     
  18. R_rabbit

    R_rabbit Well-Known Member

    Imho, Actually. I only give my opinion.
    No fact.
    It’s not written in stone:happy:
     
  19. Kasia

    Kasia Got my learning hat on

    ^^ No, opinions, here and elsewhere are not written in stone. But others sometimes believe nonsense that is written. Please do refrain until you actually have some accurate stuff to pass on. It is really not difficult to realize that although it might make you happy to act like you know the reason for things, it may in fact cause someone to think you are not just giving an "opinion" but are giving an opinion based on being knowledgeable. It is also super easy to follow threads and see what others who are knowledgeable say. Try it.
     
  20. R_rabbit

    R_rabbit Well-Known Member

    :)

    Imho, not sure if you read what I wrote because I did use question marks(?) and said “waiting for the experts to give us a better idea of what happened”. Also left a couple of helpful links. About the coin in question.
    If I’m unsure.I usually say let’s hear what the experts say.

    Now we know how that occurred.
    Thank you very much:happy:
     
    Last edited: Jun 15, 2019
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  21. Seattlite86

    Seattlite86 Outspoken Member

    You’re clearly not understanding what EVERYONE keeps telling you. No matter whether you say you “think” or “wait for experts” you are tossing out wild guesses that demonstrate to those who know what they’re talking about that you have no idea what you are saying. You seem to suggest doubling in almost every post, and this time you gave an opinion that even my wife would know to be wrong. In doing this, you risk putting false notions of a coin being worth a certain amount of money or having a certain amount of rarity.

    Look how hard it is to convince you that you’re doing a bad thing. You’re not listening to anybody and instead going by what you want. We get a lot of people that come through here convinced they have something special. Even when all the experts tell them it’s not, they don’t listen (much like you’re not listening). All it takes is one person to say what they want to hear: “I THINK it’s a XYZ” and then they will never believe otherwise.
    They might go buy the coin that they were unsure of purchasing for way more than it’s worth, they might make financial decisions believing they are about to make a lot of money. And at the very least, they will walk away from here thinking something about numismatics is true, that isn’t. Your wild guessing is BAD for the hobby. You claim to care about the hobby and about errors, so show it by continuing to learn and stop tossing out random guesses.

    Instead of throwing out wild guesses try “I’m not 100% sure if it’s what I think it is, so I’ll wait on others’ opinions”. I use that one when I think someone has a legitimate error, but don’t know for sure. This way I’m not putting an idea in their mind, that I’m not able to take out. This way, you can still provide helpful links, you can still participate in the conversation, and you can still learn from the experts.

    Please stop for a moment and think of how your advice could be damaging for others, especially for people who know even less than you do. There’s a reason so many of us are telling you the same thing.
     
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