1966 Washington Quarter FAKE OR Error

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by fastfun1111, Jul 26, 2008.

  1. fastfun1111

    fastfun1111 Senior Member

    I purchased this quarter today from a dealer at the flea market. He said he recieved it back n change the other day and noticed it was different. It appears to be made of some material with an aluminum mix as it is lighter than a US quarter. I would guess it is just a fake but why would someone fake a quarter (common year). I was wondering if there was any chance it could have been an error from the mint. Any help is appreciated.
     

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  3. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator

    So rather just saying it is lighter report the actual weight, that would be helpful.

    As to why someone would counterfeit such a coin - it cost about 6 cents to make one - you can spend it for 25 cents. Almost 500% profit seems like a pretty good reason to me.
     
  4. Coinfreak~24

    Coinfreak~24 Active Member

  5. CamaroDMD

    CamaroDMD [Insert Clever Title]

    It looks real to me, just with a lot of damage. But, as GD said...we need the weight of the coin to be sure. Because, he is right, there is profit to be made by counterfeiting one.

    There is precedence for modern counterfeit coins of small denominations. A famous example is the Henning Nickel.
     
  6. Arizona Jack

    Arizona Jack The Lincoln-ator

    Counterfeit quarters in a slot machine could be very profitable !!
     
  7. bqcoins

    bqcoins Olympic Figure Skating Scoring System Expert

    looks real but beat up to me
     
  8. TheNoost

    TheNoost huldufolk

    Does the R in trust look funny to anyone else or is it just how they were that year?
     
  9. fastfun1111

    fastfun1111 Senior Member

    Sorry I was away for a few days. I currently do not have a scale to get an accurate weight on the coin. I posted a few more pics one of the R and one of the side. It has a reeded edge. The coin will bend pretty easily with just a small amount of pressure. I will try to get a scales this week and get the weight of the coin. Thanks again
     

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  10. rhoggman

    rhoggman New Member

    I think it is fake.... if it is not you have something very special. The bad part is I somehow really doubt you have something very special. For your sake I hope you do.....

    Looksa lika funny money to a me.
     
  11. fastfun1111

    fastfun1111 Senior Member

    I would say it is a fake as well but was just curious and hoping for something rare.
     
  12. TC2007

    TC2007 Senior Member

    Aren't slot machines calibrated to reject any coin that isn't the correct weight? I remember seeing that on a documentary about a guy counterfeiting casino coins. He then got the weight right, but now the machines were spitting his "coins" out because they sensed somehow that the alloy wasn't right.
     
  13. vipergts2

    vipergts2 Jester in hobby of kings

    Look, no clad.
     
  14. rzage

    rzage What Goes Around Comes Around .

    The reeding really looks odd , and if you can bend it with your fingers it probably isn't real , it could have been made to use in parking meters back when anything close in size would work , today a coin must have a certain magnetic signature to work in the newer machines .
    rzage
     
  15. Treashunt

    Treashunt The Other Frank

    FIrst for the good news:

    That is an extremely rare lead quarter.
    Made by elves in South America.
    ebay value: priceless.

    The bad news:

    Don't try to spend it.
    [illegal to knowingly spend counterfeit money.]

    The good news:

    ebay will never know.
     
  16. Haleiwa

    Haleiwa New Member


    This is the first thing I was looking for. It may take 6 cents to make a coin, but how much does it make the die to make the coin. The first coin is always the most expensive, after you've made a million of them . . . then maybe your cost is 6 cents. But why would anybody make such a damaged design? Bottom line . . . it's real . . . spend it.
     
  17. nicknack

    nicknack Member

    I have one just like that dated 1965. Soft metal, bendable. Is reeded. I don't have a scale to weigh it, but it's close to correct. It even rings much like a "real" quarter when dropped.
     

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  18. Troodon

    Troodon Coin Collector

    I'm going to vote neither. It doesn't look like an error, just post-mint damage, and the quarter looks genuine as far as I can tell.
     
  19. Isaiah

    Isaiah New Member

    this does not appear to be genuine.
     
  20. Lehigh96

    Lehigh96 Toning Enthusiast

    Slot machines that take quarters still exist? Not in Atlantic City.
     
  21. jazzcoins

    jazzcoins New Member

    I think it's reaI,l just think it's been through hell looks like it was in
    the street, and cars ran over:rolleyes: it



    . The moto looks like there is some die deteriation doubling.
    Jazzcoins Joe :whistle::whistle:
     
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