Another odd one for me, a "broken planchet" nickel

Discussion in 'Error Coins' started by Southernman189, Dec 27, 2011.

  1. Southernman189

    Southernman189 Well-Known Member

    ok you might say, it's a clip or "cut" but this has a ragged edge and for SURE broken..never seen nothing like it in my 25 years of collecting:welcome: broken nickel 1.jpg broken nickel 2.jpg
     
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  3. rockdude

    rockdude Coin Collector

    Welcome to the forum.
     
  4. jloring

    jloring Senior Citizen

    Looks like an Oreo cookie to me...
     
  5. mikediamond

    mikediamond Coin Collector

    A uniform, grainy edge is a pretty good indicator of a natural break. If a planchet breaks before the strike it's called a "broken planchet" error. If a coin breaks apart after the strike it's called a "broken coin". They are comparatively rare, far rarer than split planchets.
     
  6. Southernman189

    Southernman189 Well-Known Member

    this is the side views broken planchet nickel obv.jpg broken planchet nickel rev.jpg
     
  7. yakpoo

    yakpoo Member

  8. Southernman189

    Southernman189 Well-Known Member

    thank you for the info!
     
  9. CashDude

    CashDude Member

    Why would it break instead of bend? Is this some kind of metallurgy problem?
     
  10. Southernman189

    Southernman189 Well-Known Member

    yes very rare for it to happen.
     
  11. zach67005

    zach67005 Active Member

    One would think that this could be easily replicated with freon, isobutane, or liquid nitrogen soft leather & a vise.
     
  12. mikediamond

    mikediamond Coin Collector

    Although I've not tried to replicate any of these scenarios, I suspect you're correct. However, I would think an artificial break arising from these procedures would be relatively straight, rather than curved as in this specimen.
     
  13. zach67005

    zach67005 Active Member

    True enough. Just saying you have to be careful when purchasing any error(but you already know this) not so much when finding them yourself.
     
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