1973D - off axis reverse question

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by Ghengis Jon, Apr 13, 2014.

  1. Ghengis Jon

    Ghengis Jon New Member

    Hi -

    My youngest son collects US coins (I collect ancient Greek and Roman) and have a question concerning die axis. He came across a 1973-D cent with very high luster, which is why he's adding it to his collection. The reverse axis is not 180 degrees, but about 195. Is this common/uncommon? I see off-axis coins all the time in ancients. Common for ancients but 'normal' for US coins? Is this something he (my son) should look for? Thanks! Jon
     
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. ken454

    ken454 Well-Known Member

    its called a rotated die error http://error-ref.com/Rotated_Die_Error.html slight rotations are somewhat common, i believe they need to be at least 90 degrees to carry a premium, but they are still cool to find (IMO),
     
  4. Ethan

    Ethan Collector of Kennedy's

    Yes keep it either way, they are neat to find.
     
  5. ken454

    ken454 Well-Known Member

    "Is this something he (my son) should look for?"

    rotated dies is something i always look for when roll searching..found this nickel few months ago

    1995d-1-horz.jpg
     
  6. Ethan

    Ethan Collector of Kennedy's

    Yes keep them, you will not get rich but they are not as common as one would think.
     
  7. Ghengis Jon

    Ghengis Jon New Member

    Thank you for the quick responses. My son and I appreciate it! Jon
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page