1943 S Steel Penny

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by Janice T, Apr 17, 2023.

  1. Janice T

    Janice T New Member

    I have several steel pennies from different mints, but this is by far the best. I’m including some out of focus (not on purpose) images to show the luster. The 43S is the one one the right. I’m having trouble getting clear images with my iPhone, any tips? Also, looking for opinions on value and PCGS level?
    I appreciate any comments, thanks. 0E1ECFCB-28B7-4B68-872B-E5A8A87B1E4E.jpeg A4E41BCC-9814-435B-839D-7C7A25823551.jpeg D48BCF49-94E8-4E6C-BC01-3B9F9FD7E34B.jpeg EBD320FD-5F5A-479A-B094-A60B10EF277B.jpeg CD08ABCD-C77D-48C7-B757-CD43453B4EFF.jpeg 2C990E43-5600-4E73-8E7C-6771F1EAB732.jpeg 1723BECE-97D1-4AEB-84AE-B1D58D09AD1D.jpeg
     
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  3. Evan Saltis

    Evan Saltis OWNER - EBS Numis LLC

    Reprocessed? Let others comment.

    That being said, it is not worth submitting
     
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  4. furham

    furham Good Ole Boy

    I might have to agree with @Evan Saltis .
     
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  5. Mr.Q

    Mr.Q Well-Known Member

    I too believe it has been reprocessed. If that is the case it has only face value, sorry. The cost to have a 1943 cent graded and slabbed often is not worth the cost, in my opinion. Thanks for sharing.
     
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  6. furham

    furham Good Ole Boy

    I inherited a roll of 43's that were reprocessed which I noticed right away. The funny thing is there was a 42 mixed in with the bunch that was also plated silver color.
     
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  7. furham

    furham Good Ole Boy

    Is that an rpm or is that just the photos.
     
  8. Janice T

    Janice T New Member

    Curious to know what years coins were reprocessed?
     
  9. Mr.Q

    Mr.Q Well-Known Member

    I noticed that possible RPM also @furham. That would be great for @Janice T if it were. Good luck!
     
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  10. Janice T

    Janice T New Member

    Would you please explain why you think it’s reprocessed? I’m not saying it isn’t, just trying to learn.
     
  11. Mr.Q

    Mr.Q Well-Known Member

    Any year and any coin can and has been reprocessed, usually for profit. Be safe rather than sorry, research and posting would be in your best interest.
     
  12. Mr.Q

    Mr.Q Well-Known Member

    Severe cleaning and polishing are great enemies on coins.
     
  13. furham

    furham Good Ole Boy

    The surfaces just have a bubbly look to me. Look at the coin next to it.
     
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  14. lordmarcovan

    lordmarcovan 48-year collector Moderator

    It's mainly a thing with the 1943 steel cents, which tended to rust. Many got reprocessed (replated), to look better. I can't tell from the pics if yours were or not. I'll defer to the others on that.
     
  15. bradgator2

    bradgator2 Well-Known Member

    Cant you tell by looking on edge?
     
  16. Janice T

    Janice T New Member

    What should a coin that wasn’t reprocessed look like? I looked on the internet and couldn’t find an image.
     
  17. bradgator2

    bradgator2 Well-Known Member

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  18. Mountain Man

    Mountain Man Well-Known Member

    @Janice T, you need to understand that the "steel" cents were only produced for one year, during WW II, so millions were saved, thinking that they would be worth more than face in the future, like my grandfather did. As such, there are companies that made money by collecting, cleaning, and then re-coating them in zinc, and selling them for a profit. They were more souvenirs than collectibles. If you remove your coin from the album, and carefully examine the edge (rim) of the coin, it should be dull. If it is shining, like the obverse and reverse, then it was reprocessed and worth maybe 3¢ to a nickel, but there are so many out there (I have over 800 of them, as I inherited my grandfather's collection) that they just never increased in value or became collectible. I give them away to young collectors, in my beginner's kit.
     
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  19. desertgem

    desertgem Senior Errer Collecktor Supporter

    When the steel metal sheets were made that the cent planchets were punched out were zinc plated on top and bottom( shiny), but the edge of each ompleted cent would show shiny plating on the top and bottom, but the edge stayed raw and dull steel color ( until it rusted). Many old 1943 cents have rusted edges. Replating puts a new coat of zinc on all areas, obverse, reverse , and edge and are worth 1 cent although many were sold at $1.00 in the 50-60s. Jim
     
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  20. Spark1951

    Spark1951 Accomplishment, not Activity

    @Janice T …the re-processed steel cents are known as novelty or souvenir coins (as noted by @Mountain Man ) but are plentiful. LCSs and coin dealers, like Littleton in New Hampshire will include them in sets they advertise for sale. So you have to be on the lookout.

    As novelties, I have seen them for sale from 50 cents to $3.00 each. As re-processed cents they are worthless numismatically because the surfaces have been altered. I still have 27 of them. Any member wants one send me a PM with your shipping address and I will send you one free of charge. I will send it to you via USPS so I can’t guarantee it will get you this year or ever arrive…Spark
     
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  21. paddyman98

    paddyman98 I'm a professional expert in specializing! Supporter

    Not a RPM. It is the result of an extra layer of the reprocessing.
     
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