1851 Large Cent Fake

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by bkozak33, Jan 17, 2015.

  1. bkozak33

    bkozak33 Collector

    I bought a bag of large cents, and this guy stuck out like a sore thumb. Beside the obvious lack of detail, It weighs 3.5 grams, and is paper thin. My question to the forum is, Why counterfeit a cent like this? Is it a new fake or an old one?

    P1171275.JPG P1171276.JPG
     
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  3. longnine009

    longnine009 Darwin has to eat too. Supporter

    If it was struck at the mint on a very under weight planchet it shouldn't have much detail.
     
  4. bkozak33

    bkozak33 Collector

    do you think that is the case?
     
  5. C-B-D

    C-B-D Well-Known Member

    Looks like my acid dipped lincoln cents... where someone let them disolve for a while and then passed them off as error coins.
     
  6. coinman1234

    coinman1234 Not a Well-Known Member

    Someone put it in acid for a science experiment or to fake an error

    It is a real coin though
     
  7. bkozak33

    bkozak33 Collector

    P1171277.JPG
     
  8. C-B-D

    C-B-D Well-Known Member

    Acid can actually do that. It would eat away the raised surface at the same rate as the fields.
     
    Seattlite86 likes this.
  9. rlm's cents

    rlm's cents Numismatist

    That would be my guess also.
     
  10. C-B-D

    C-B-D Well-Known Member

    Looks like the diameter shrunk as well... same as my acid lincolns.
     
  11. bkozak33

    bkozak33 Collector

    They belong together.
     
    coinman1234 likes this.
  12. Seattlite86

    Seattlite86 Outspoken Member

    Agreed on acid dip; that was my inclination.
     

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  13. longnine009

    longnine009 Darwin has to eat too. Supporter

    I was thinking that it was struck on a planchet intended for a private token. It's not unusual for them to be struck on thin planchets when they just have letters on them. Or the planchet was punched from strip that was just rolled to the wrong thickness.

    But I think the acid theory sounds better.
     
    Last edited: Jan 17, 2015
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