1949 D Washington Quarter RPM or OMM?

Discussion in 'Error Coins' started by Agilmore01, May 19, 2014.

  1. Agilmore01

    Agilmore01 Well-Known Member

    I purchased this 1949 D Washington quarter graded by PCGS the other week. I thought the mint mark looked a little funny in the pic, so I checked it out closer when I got it in hand. PCGS lists an RPM and an OMM (don't know what that means) for this year. I posted the best close ups I could. Any help? I looks like a normal D and then a partial sideways D inside it.[​IMG][​IMG][​IMG]
     
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. Agilmore01

    Agilmore01 Well-Known Member

    I think it is the D/D/D/D. Trying to look at the markers from varietyvista website. It's either the RPM 1 or RPM 2. Was hoping it was the D/D or the OMM. If it was, it would have been the highest one graded by PCGS. Don't think there are any MS66's.

    Sent from my SCH-I545 using Tapatalk
     
  4. non_cents

    non_cents Well-Known Member

    OMM means over mintmark (meaning D/S or S/D, etc).

    I am having a tough time seeing an RPM in your photos. There is glare on the right side of the mintmark, possible mechanical doubling on the left, but I'm not really seeing any split serifs on the D...
     
  5. Clutchy

    Clutchy Well-Known Member

    I think it's MD as well. That ridge is too even from top to bottom, making the highest point of the MM smaller than what's below the ridge. Notice how the lighting comes to a complete stop on the lower side of the mintmark? That's because that edge is sharp. If it was a curve, like the profile of the mintmark, the light would gradually fade to the bottom.
     
  6. Agilmore01

    Agilmore01 Well-Known Member

    Here's a pic of a mintmark that someone else sold on ebay as a D/D. Looks just like mine from what I can tell. I can't really find any good close up pics of what it should look like to be genuine.[​IMG]
     
  7. Agilmore01

    Agilmore01 Well-Known Member

    I originally thought it was MY at first also, but when I researched and saw PCGS has a listed variety for it, I thought I might research more.
     
  8. atrox001

    atrox001 Senior Member

  9. Agilmore01

    Agilmore01 Well-Known Member

    I am able to see the die break down the right wing. It's hard to see the other markers. I might not be looking for the right stuff. The coin has some toning on it and makes It hard to see some places clearly. I don't fully understand all the markers either. My local coin dealer doesn't really mess with varieties so he isn't much help either.
     
  10. atrox001

    atrox001 Senior Member

    If you are a serious variety collector...you will use a microscope and be able to see and attribute varieties using markers. Also if I was you I would stop using LED lighting for your photos...way to much glare.
    Larry Nienaber
     
  11. Agilmore01

    Agilmore01 Well-Known Member

    Doing the best I can with what I have. Don't have a professional camera or microscope. Was using my cell phone and tiny handheld microscope with a light attached.
     
  12. Agilmore01

    Agilmore01 Well-Known Member

    I took it to to dealers today and one said it was the right RPM and the other said it was a minor RPM and not the more valuable one. This is the absolute best picture I can give.[​IMG]
     
  13. atrox001

    atrox001 Senior Member

    What do the markers say?

    Larry Nienaber
     
  14. Agilmore01

    Agilmore01 Well-Known Member

    I found 2 of the markers. Does it have to have all of them to be the real one, or just some?

    Sent from my SCH-I545 using Tapatalk
     
  15. Agilmore01

    Agilmore01 Well-Known Member

    I stuck it on ebay and posted pics and said it may be a type of RPM. I will let the bidders decide what it is. Anxious to see where it ends up.

    Sent from my SCH-I545 using Tapatalk
     
  16. jay4202472000

    jay4202472000 Well-Known Member

    Good question. The answer is no. However, the marker/markers have to be exact. It can't just be close. Markers change from die state to die state, and within each die state. The mint mark looks right. Have you checked mint mark position? MM position & whatever marker(s) have to be exact though. Hope this helps & good luck.
     
  17. Agilmore01

    Agilmore01 Well-Known Member

    The two markers I found match the pic on PCGS website. The dealer I took it to said mine didn't have the point on the top of the D like the others certified, so mine wasn't it. He said it was either MD or a type of RPM, but not the main one. I trust him since he is a Red Book contributor and knows his stuff. I still hope someone recognizes what it is and bids accordingly.
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page