Would this fall under a planchet error (Lamination error) or something else? Don't think I need to explain what we are looking at! Lol
I know some members will state.. "Wrong paddyman. There are no laminations on Copper Plated Zinc Cents!" .. Well you tell that to NGC! From my collection
They're really not laminations - NGC got that one wrong. They are copper plating bubbles or blisters...has nothing to do with metal mixture problems.
as fred said copper platting not bonded well to the core of the coin that is what causes those bubbles which your coin has
Are you being serious or sarcastic..? Just bc it says new member dnt mean were plain dumb to the world..
There are no reasons to like them at all! Excuse the bad photo, I shouldn't have been on my phone but you get the point.
I just haven't seen you around the forum... I was saying you're smart and I was wondering where you have been... I know you joined around the time I joined... We need people like you on this forum more often
Why haven't they found an alternative better metal? or heck even go back to copper? Then everybody would be happy.
Yes, sort of. A typical lamination is due to impurities and/or trapped air pockets that occurred during the original melt. The OPs coin is caused by a plating defect where the copper didn't stick to the zinc core due to some type of contamination (dirty blanks) as pointed out by others. It's due to the plating process, not the melting/alloying process. If the defect was under the surface of the zinc and occurred during the zinc casting process then it would be a lamination BTW: I prefer the term delamination (along with some other members) as it better describes the defect, but that hasn't worked it's way into the hobby nomenclature yet.