Blank found in 1964-D OBW roll of cents.

Discussion in 'Error Coins' started by Detecto92, Apr 11, 2012.

  1. Detecto92

    Detecto92 Well-Known Member

    OMG!

    Looks like this on both sides. Is it real?

    The roll was OBW (original bank wrapped).

    [​IMG]

    The oval shape was just from the angle I took the photo.
     
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  3. jhinton

    jhinton Well-Known Member

    Looks real to me,nice find! I think that would be a type 2, but I am not sure. Someone will though!
     
  4. ikandiggit

    ikandiggit Currency Error Collector

    Is it copper? Looks silvery in the pic.

    Anyway it's a blank upset planchet. If it's copper, it's worth a couple of bucks. If it's silver, quite a bit more.
     
  5. Detecto92

    Detecto92 Well-Known Member

    What's even cooler is that since this is OBW, I know what year and mint it is!
     
  6. Detecto92

    Detecto92 Well-Known Member

    It's copper. It was reflecting something making it look silvery.
     
  7. Detecto92

    Detecto92 Well-Known Member

    It does have a "rim" on it. I thought the rim was from the die process?
     
  8. Stang1968

    Stang1968 Member

    They upset the rim prior to striking, but the retaining collar adds the reeds if applicable, and keeps the planchet the proper size so that the metal is forced into the crevices of the die and not out the edges.
     
  9. Billyray

    Billyray Junior Member

    No, they upset the rim before striking, here's what it says on the Coneca website.

    and

     
  10. coinguy-matthew

    coinguy-matthew Ike Crazy

  11. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    Yes but you are the only one who does and you can't prove it to anyone else so it just becomes a regular generic planchet.
     
  12. mrbrklyn

    mrbrklyn New Member

  13. Merc Crazy

    Merc Crazy Bumbling numismatic fool

    Year and mint specifies when and where a coin was struck.

    Your planchet was never struck and therefore, isn't a coin, and doesn't need a mintmark or year.
     
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