1999 feeder finger marks?

Discussion in 'Error Coins' started by Sheila Ruley, Jun 15, 2016.

  1. Sheila Ruley

    Sheila Ruley The short blonde girl

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  3. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    looks like die was scrapped by something. The feed fingers would be a definite possibility.
     
  4. cpm9ball

    cpm9ball CANNOT RE-MEMBER

    If they are raised, they couldn't be feeder marks.

    Chris
     
    Insider likes this.
  5. Sheila Ruley

    Sheila Ruley The short blonde girl

    They are not raised.
     
  6. paddyman98

    paddyman98 I'm a professional expert in specializing! Supporter

    Could it maybe be a Die Trail of some sort?
    I want to share this website with you -http://www.traildies.com/
     
  7. Insider

    Insider Talent on loan from...

    Feed fingers would have gouged the struck coin. These are original and INTO the coin (if Sheila is correct and they are not raised). They look raised to me.

    They were on the face of the die (go under the letters). I'll bet they were on the planchet as I don't believe wide marks like this are made by any tool used to polish a die. When dies show this type of mark coming from the letters they are called "trail dies" but these do not appear to come from anything. Using just photos to determine their source, you have a neat mystery coin. :facepalm:

    Edit: Guess it is an abraded die.
     
  8. Sheila Ruley

    Sheila Ruley The short blonde girl

    The thick part is raised and the thinner ones are are incuse.
     
  9. tomfiggy

    tomfiggy Well-Known Member

    The lines appear inside and outside of the bays. It looks like die scratches to me. Possibly linear plating bubbles?
     
  10. Sheila Ruley

    Sheila Ruley The short blonde girl

    They are solid and in the bays as well as through the top and bottom of the coin. They run exactly straight. They are not wavy at all. Smooth as well.
     
  11. Sheila Ruley

    Sheila Ruley The short blonde girl

    I can't match them up with any of those.
     
  12. cpm9ball

    cpm9ball CANNOT RE-MEMBER

    They look raised to me, too, and I go along with the abraded die theory.

    Chris
     
  13. Markus1959

    Markus1959 Well-Known Member

    Isn't an abraded die the same thing as a deteriorated die?
     
  14. Insider

    Insider Talent on loan from...

    NO. Deterioration happens by itself as the die is used. It can also happen if a die is not stored correctly and deteriorates.

    Abrasion implies scraping/rubbing/scrubbing, & whatever - done by someone at the mint.
     
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  15. Sheila Ruley

    Sheila Ruley The short blonde girl

    Ok cool. Would this be an error or variety?
     
  16. Insider

    Insider Talent on loan from...

    This is my opinion: In a perfect world, a coin like this would not occur. That is not the case. The Mint is a factory and all sorts of INSIGNIFICANT things can happen. The coin you posted here is neat. I wish it were mine; however, aside from going into a teaching set (for example) to show students what can happen at the mint, IMO, the coin is nothing special EXCEPT to those collectors who enjoy looking at coins under magnification. If I found it I should keep it in a little box with the rest of my "junk" with die breaks, die polish, cuds, laminations, etc. None of this stuff is worth much but I'll never part with it. :)

    The important thing is you are having inexpensive FUN, you have found some pretty good coins that you can sell for multiples of your cost, and you are learning about the basic numismatic characteristics seen on coins. I hope one day you have the chance to take an error/variety seminar as you will make a great student!
     
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  17. mikediamond

    mikediamond Coin Collector

    As others have said, these are die scrapes from a feeder.
     
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  18. Insider

    Insider Talent on loan from...

    :oops: :eggface: :facepalm: IMO, your coin is no longer insignificant. :shame:


    So, that means the feed fingers SCRAPED THE DIE right? Makes sense. I've never seen this before. How scarce is this characteristic? Does it happen more on one coin series? Value on a cent like this?

    Just looked up "die scrapes" on Error-Ref. it is in my favorites...;) Neat!
     
  19. Cascade

    Cascade CAC Grader, Founding Member

    Quite common. On morgans at least. I'm sure they're just as common on modern Lincoln's too with the bazillion they pound out
     
  20. Insider

    Insider Talent on loan from...

    Thanks, I've never, ever, seen this type of mark on a coin. I probably didn't have a clue what I was looking at if I did see one. :hilarious::hilarious::hilarious: I'm going to start a thread right now to see how common these are.
     
  21. Cascade

    Cascade CAC Grader, Founding Member

    Here's a couple of morgans with gnarly ones I have at hand...

    20160509_143335.jpg 20160509_143812.jpg
     
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