1992 quarter no mint mark

Discussion in 'Error Coins' started by Sheila Ruley, Aug 1, 2016.

  1. pennsteve

    pennsteve Well-Known Member

    It depends how far you zoomed in. That might just be an optical illusion. Get another quarter with a P and zoom in just as much and try to take the same picture. Compare the two. That "p" you point out seems a bit small to me, but then I don't know how far you are zoomed in.
     
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  3. Sheila Ruley

    Sheila Ruley The short blonde girl

    image.jpeg
    Here is a 1993 P quarter
     
  4. pennsteve

    pennsteve Well-Known Member

    If it is the same zoom, then the sizes are different. I rotated the first picture and added it to the second. p1p2.jpg
     
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  5. Sheila Ruley

    Sheila Ruley The short blonde girl

    Yes, same zoom. I did not adjust it at all from what it was from the other quarter. It is a big difference though.
     
  6. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    They were put in the working dies, by hand, until 1990. 1990 and later the mintmark is in the Master hub
     
  7. coinzip

    coinzip Well-Known Member

    Now your next quest is to figure out a value for a Missing Mint Mark quarter... :)
     
  8. Sheila Ruley

    Sheila Ruley The short blonde girl

    Probably a quarter. Lol
     
  9. Sheila Ruley

    Sheila Ruley The short blonde girl

    Check this out:

    Guest Author - Raymond F. Hanisco

    Mint Marks are letter designations found on a coin to tell you from which Mint a coin was manufactured. Most countries follow a fairly sequential alphabetical format, for example, Germany used “A” for Berlin, “B” for Vienna, “D” for Munich, “E” for Muldenhutten, and so forth. The United States, however, used and still uses the first letter of the city for which the coin was manufactured, but you must understand there are always exceptions to the general rule. A prime example is, coins struck at the Philadelphia Mint do not have a Mint Mark on them if they were made prior to 1979, but the “War Nickels” made from 1942 to 1945 do have the “P” Mint Mark. Then just to confuse things a little more, in 1979 the “P” Mint Mark was used only on the dollar coin, and thereafter on all the other coin denominations, except on the penny. Are we all confused, yet? Great!! So, here are the US Coin Mint Marks in alphabetical order. Please note the dates these Mint Marks were used because there are two “D” Mint Marks.

    C Charlotte, North Carolina 1838 – 1861 (gold coins only)
    CC Carson City, Nevada 1870 – 1893
    D Dahlonega, Georgia 1838 – 1861 (gold coins only)
    D Denver, Colorado 1906 to present
    O New Orleans, Louisiana 1838 – 1909
    P Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 1793 to present
    S San Francisco, California 1854 to present
    W West Point, New York 1984 to present

    For the most part, the Mint Mark can be found on the reverse (back) of the coin, but on the penny the Mint Mark is on the obverse (front). Just for your general knowledge, the obverse is the side upon which the date appears.

    Up until 1996, all the dies from which coins were struck were made at the Philadelphia Mint, now some are made at the Denver facility. The dies to be sent to other branch mints to make coins would have the Mint Mark hand punched into them. It seems that whatever style of font was available at the time was used to punch the Mint Mark into the dies, so we find fat ones, and thin ones, tall, short and even micro Mint Marks. We find coins where the Mint Mark was punched into the dies with a heavy hand and those that were lightly punched. There are even US coins where one Mint Mark was struck into the die and then they did it again as in the 1865 “S” over “S” Seated Liberty Quarter, or where one Mint Mark was struck into the die over top of another Mint Mark as in the 1900 “O” over “CC” Morgan Dollar. There was even a case, in recent years, where proof dimes were struck at the West Point Mint and the “W” Mint Mark was never put on the die. Oops! Somebody goofed.

    Well technology has advanced the placement and style of the Mint Mark. Around 1990, the US Mint standardized the font and size of the Mint Mark. No longer are Mint Marks being hand struck into the coin dies. What the Mint is doing is making the Mint Mark a part of the template or hub from which the dies are made. It is now all one process.

    To learn more about Mint Marks and other facts about coins, pick up a copy of the “Red Book.” The official title of the book is "A Guide Book of United States Coins" by R.S. Yeoman. Any bookstore should have it, or buy it on line. A new edition is published each year, so buy the paperback edition, it’s cheaper. It should be one of your reference books.
     
  10. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    I don't believe proof dimes have ever been struck at West Point, unless maybe the March of Dimes coins last year, I don't remember what mintmark they used. And there were no missing mintmarks discovered on those. I believe he is thinking of the no S proof coins in the 1968 to 1990 era.
     
  11. Sheila Ruley

    Sheila Ruley The short blonde girl

    I wonder what he meant then. This was the closest thing I could find even related to the mint marks though. I don't know where else to look for answers. I just wonder if it is just a simple case of a grease filled die.
     
  12. dchjr

    dchjr Well-Known Member

    I know this is a little old, but I just found one also without the mint mark. I zoomed in with my scope and don't see any trace of one. The rest of the coin looks like a good strike.
     

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  13. Sheila Ruley

    Sheila Ruley The short blonde girl

    I got a reply from someone that works at a mint. He said it is just grease filled die. Dang! Too bad we didn't have error coins! That would have been cool.
     
  14. dchjr

    dchjr Well-Known Member

    Yes it would have been! Thanks for the feedback.
     
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