1982 Onza doubled die???

Discussion in 'Error Coins' started by LostDutchman, Mar 27, 2012.

  1. LostDutchman

    LostDutchman Under Staffed & Overly Motivated Supporter

    Hey guys!

    I was looking through some onza's and saw 3 of these struck from the same dies.

    Lots of extra thickness radial from the letters... What do you think? Is it a DDO?
    I know there is an 1987 doubled die... but I can't find any reference to an 1982.

    Mine
    ddoonza3.jpg

    A non doubled coin from a year later
    83onza1.jpg
     
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  3. mackwork

    mackwork Caretaker of old coins & currency

    just my opinion, but it looks like the date and letters were squashed by something that applied pressure.
     
  4. Tater

    Tater Coin Collector

    Interesting, I have a roll of 1982 maybe I better take a closer look at them.
     
  5. LostDutchman

    LostDutchman Under Staffed & Overly Motivated Supporter

    It could be die wear... But I do have 3 examples from this die pair.
     
  6. mackwork

    mackwork Caretaker of old coins & currency

    Do yours look the same as the OPs?
     
  7. LostDutchman

    LostDutchman Under Staffed & Overly Motivated Supporter

    I am the OP.... I was kinda talking to myself there... haha!
     
  8. mackwork

    mackwork Caretaker of old coins & currency

    Well, DUH on me LOL! I should have paid attention!
     
  9. rascal

    rascal Well-Known Member

    this is exactly what I was going to say but I see you have it already figured out. every coin this die struck after it got this worn will be identical to each other until the die get's worse .
    I like it where you say you have three of them . this is what I have been trying to tell folks on here. If you find a mint roll of coins and the roll has a error coin in it then there will usually be more of them from the same dies in the roll.

    back in late 1982 I had 40 rolls of 83 cent coins and each roll had at least 30 of the #1 die DDR coins. there were way more doubled dies in the rolls than the normal cents. back then I didn't have a computer and kept the coins about a year then decided that they were the worthless MD coins and took them back to the bank. this really has learned me a lesson the hard way and I never did be able to find even one of them back , this is a true story.

    now when I find a bank that has coin rolls with error coins in them I get all I can from that box the roll came from.I learned the exact date on the little white mint collector boxes that the best detached leg bison 5 cent coins was in and I now have over 400 of them. they averaged out to be about 4 coins per roll , the best roll I found had 11 of them. it appears that the mint workers puts the coins in a bin and send them out to be rolled. evidently the company that rolls the coins just does one bin at the time.
     
  10. desertgem

    desertgem Senior Errer Collecktor Supporter

    Matt, it looks like MD to me. I couldn't find any separation in the photos that would seem like a DD. Also similar to what Rascal says above, when a die is poorly held in the press, often a large number of MD coins will be produced. I have seen it in original bags of some of the late 60-early 70 S-mint Lincolns, often 100 or more out of 5000, Almost all the same.

    Jim
     
  11. LostDutchman

    LostDutchman Under Staffed & Overly Motivated Supporter

    Here is the 1987 DDO.

    doubleddie1.jpg doubleddie2.jpg
    doubleddie3.jpg doubleddie4.jpg
     
  12. desertgem

    desertgem Senior Errer Collecktor Supporter

    Yes, I see doubled die results on the "1", "7" the "e" in Ley, and a few other separated serifs, i would agree about this one.

    Jim
     
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