Hi im in need of some help here. I got a 1982 penny back in change yesturday. It has extra numbers on reverse. I thought is was just a scaped up damaged coin. Until i looked closer. Errors galore. I want to sell but not sure what to call it or ask for it?. Im having issues loading pics on here. If anyone has a solution for that as well that would be appreciated. Thanks
I still can't figure out how someone looks at this coin and says "yup that definitely happened when it was made...37 years ago..." No slight to OP because they aren't the first and certainly are not going to be the last. It just makes me wonder.
Wow, that's nice, if someone offers you a cent for it, take it fast. Its a large date copper if you was interested to know. If I was being honest, its damaged, its not worth anything but face. the way to tell for someone who does not know, is ask yourself if it looked that way when it left the mint, you cannot have a severely damaged coin, and go back in time, it lost all its value already.
I don't know man...Those tomatoes seem to really help you out... I'm just sitting here with some cheap beer.
My son girl friend just seen them for the first time . You should of seen her eyes . Harvesting in 6 weeks ...
Ok so lets assume it has a severe case of road rash. It must of happened on county rd 2. Then several other roads. They all left there mark. Look at the 2 where T is suppose to be. Plus numbers in middle. Looks to me like a 5 in liberty. It must have rolled over to county road 5 perhaps. No way somehow 37 years ago it made its way this far.
I suppose next your gonna tell me there's no Santa Clause either . That was a joke. I'll get it looked at i just cant see a c oin having that much detail being damaged.
I suppose next your gonna tell me there's no Santa Clause either . That was a joke. I'll get it looked at i just cant see a c oin having that much detail being damaged.
Nope, sorry. Wear and tear on the first, the second one looks like zinc rot. This is where the zinc is exposed through the copper plating and begins to corrode.