Can anyone help me with this one? The cent is a 1964-d and the obverse is undamaged. Wondering what caused the error and if it has any value. Is this what they call a brockage?
Hammer job. Someone got another coin and put it on top of the coin and hit the coin with a hammer to get that. Here is a real brockage http://www.fredweinberg.com/inventory/item.asp?ID=4246
Jerome: I don't think that it is a hammer job. For one thing, a hammer job would have some effect on the obverse, and there doesn't appear to be any obverse damage. The reverse looks like it is a struck thru, as in struck thru a piece of scrap. (I am sure that Mike Diamond will be along shortly to correct me if I am wrong, but it looks ligit to me).
I hope it is not just a hammered coin I just tried to hammer a few cents and it bent the coins everytime and did not make a crater like this coin has. It did make a mirrored impression on the coins though.
Not a hammer job, I also think it is the same effect as a brockage but this coin was struck through a fragment as opposed to being struck by another coin stuck to a die. I think Treashunt nailed it By the way, if I'm right, this is a pretty neat error. like the rest of us, I always wait for Mike's thoughts. Have Fun, Bill
Value of error The owner of the coin wants me to sell it on ebay if it has any decent value. Any ballpark figures? The owner is a customer of my coin shop.