What's up with this quarter?

Discussion in 'Error Coins' started by Inhatredofme, Oct 15, 2010.

  1. Inhatredofme

    Inhatredofme New Member

    I'm brand new to the forums because I have a question about this quarter I came across. It's a 1977 and pretty standard in appearance except the rim is raised and the edge of the coin doesn't have the standard ridged appearance and you can see the outer and inner layer of the coin. Thanks for any info.

    quarter resized.jpg resized quarter 2.jpg resized quarter 3.jpg [​IMG]
     
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  3. Simms

    Simms Tactile History

    Cool, looks like it just missed the rim press somehow. Worth = 5-10 depending on the buyer id guess.
     
  4. Captainkirk

    Captainkirk 73 Buick Riviera owner

    It looks like the start of a 'spooning'.
     
  5. DoK U Mint

    DoK U Mint In Odd we Trust

    Very Interesting

    Folks SPOON non~silver coins CK?

    I was thinking a "caught in the clothes dryer" but the other surfaces seem too intact.

    Either way I'm guessing Post Mint Damage.
     
  6. LostDutchman

    LostDutchman Under Staffed & Overly Motivated Supporter

    Yeah definitely not an error. This coin ended up in a situation where the rim was hit many many times with some small amount of force. Coins that spend some time in clothes dryers for example can look like this.
     
  7. Hobo

    Hobo Squirrel Hater

    What is a "rim press"?

    And I agree - probably a coin that tumbled around inside a clothes dryer for a while.
     
  8. Simms

    Simms Tactile History

    Rim Press = the name I just recently created for the method of adding the textured edge to the coin during mintage.
     
  9. 19Lyds

    19Lyds Member of the United States of Confusion

    [​IMG]

    I'm thinking a book on "How coins are Made" might be in order here. [​IMG]

    Textured Edge = Reeding. Reeding is created when the coin is minted (the third die) Coins which do not received the "third die" impression are called Broad Strikes and are LARGER in diameter than coins which DO recieve the "reeding".

    Minting process which creates the rim on a planchet = Upsetting Mill. Blanks which bypass the Upsetting Mill are LARGER than planchets which do not.

    Coins which are SMALLER in diameter, have smooth edges, and high rims = PMD (Post Mint Damage) and carry no premium at all unless you can find a sucker who believes everything you say and is willing to pay that premium. The source of the PMD is unimportant.
     
  10. Inhatredofme

    Inhatredofme New Member

    Thanks for the info guys, got it in a handful of change and thought it was weird.
     
  11. fretboard

    fretboard Defender of Old Coinage!

    Yup, ya better put a copyright on that one! :D
     
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