My son found this coming today that appears to be a quarter struck on a nickel planchet. The coin had a raised edge on the head side only and most of the details are worn away or never existed correctly. It weighs 4.3 grams. Any ideas?
what makes you think it was struck on a nickel planchet? The coin looks like PMD to me. If you think about how these coins are manufactured, a quarter struck on a nickel planchet wouldn't have a raised rim, it wouldn't have enough metal to complete the strike at all.
Mike, I don't know Jack about coins which is why I'm reaching out for information. PMD? I don't know what that means. Penny of Mass destruction?? Haha. Seriously I have no clue. The raised edge is higher on the left and hardly there on the right.
First, welcome to the neighborhood! It's hard for me to tell anything based on those photos. I'd need better close-ups of the coin in question. By the way, PMD means "post-mint damage". Chris
It's a quarter struck on a quarter planchet that has undergone damage since it left the Mint. "PMD" means "Post-Mint Damage."
I'm not sold on this just yet. Note that you can see a rim on the reverse. If it was "spooned" both rims would be about the same size. Wouldn't they? I need better close-ups. Chris
Why does the sun keep on shining? Why does the sea rush to shore? Don't they know, it's the end of the worl-how the hell do we know?
That's kind of the point, Chris. If the planchet was a nickel (undersized) the rim wouldn't be present.
Please take the photos of both sides from directly overhead, not at an angle. Try to take the photos as close as possible without blocking out the light. Then crop out the extraneous background and re-size the image. When you upload the photo, click on "Full Frame" rather than "Thumbnail". Chris
If they were making a ring, how could the rim on the obverse end up larger than the rim on the reverse? Chris
looks like someone had started to make it into a ring by "spooning" it/hammer the edge inward and then stopped.