Ive got this copper 1943 wheaty (ive used magnet test) that i found in my dad's old coin collection, i saw on youtube that you can make a penny realy shiny with use of vinegar, anyother techniques i can use? maybe a stronger acid?
i already posted that i used a magnet to test if it is steel. It doesn't stick. Plus you can clearly see that it is copper.
You have an altered date cent. Find a photograph of a regular 1943 steel cent and you will find that there is much less space between the 4 and the 3 and that the "3" of a real '43 cent has a much different tail on it. I suspect it use to be a 1948 that was altered for fun or profit. Jim
Sorry I really didn't answer your question. If it was a real 43 copper cent, you would not try anything on the coin. Trying to clean it would remove tremendous value. Any acid product or physical scrub would be a unwise thing to do. Jim
it looks like a 3 not an 8, its rare, looked it up and its worth a lot! How could it be fake? its copper, and its date is 1943.
Look at the tail of this "3" and also how close the "3" is to the "4". Yours has neither of these features. They take a non-magnetic 1948 copper cent and using engraving tools, change the "8" into a "3", but since the "8" occupied more space, there is a larger gap between the numbers when they finish. It is the same that 1944 D cents are made into 1914 D cents. Yes I am well aware of the rarity and the price, that is why people do this. If your dad had thought it real , he would have had it authenticated. There are many altered ones out there. Jim
People alter coins all the time. Notice how far away the 3 is from the 4, now using your imagination, place an 8 on top of the 3. The 8 would be in proportion with a normal 1948. Have you read any of the topics on the 1914-D's that used to be 1944-D's? There are all kinds of scam artists out there...
Did you actually read any of the posts? It LOOKS like a 3 because someone CHANGED a 1948 to LOOK LIKE a 1943. Notice how far apart the 4 and 3 are. People alter coins to look like rarer coins all the time. Joe
Everything except Yep~ What this says except the part about Dad having it submitted somewhere. Still a nice find. Set it aside and charish it as a magneto. It will not loose value for what it is.
I am not sure just what you have there, but one thing I can tell you is that it is not a 1943 Lincoln cent. Someone has done something to alter the date. Also, if you ever do get a valuable coin, the first thing you should do is promise yourself that you will never clean it.
I surely can understand not wanting to accept that the 43 copper penny you were so excited about might be an altered date, I mean you start looking at what the last one sold for and start paying off mortgages and loans in your mind, maybe taking a little trip to decompress from all the stress, and then some people rain all over your parade by telling you something you do not want to hear. I know, my dad left me a copy of a janus cent, tho I sort of wish he had written copy on the 2x2 just so I would not let hope and aspirations rear its ugly head.
There is no doubt that the coin is an altered cent. The 3 on a 1943 cent is very particular in its appearance. The coin seen here was a 1948 cent at one time. Thanks, Bill