1868 Shield Nickel RPD

Discussion in 'Error Coins' started by coinman101, Jul 16, 2007.

  1. coinman101

    coinman101 Collector Of All Coins

    I bought this nickel a few days ago at the summer FUN Show. It has XF details and I got it for 10 bucks! Later, my brother noticed that there was doubling on 8. It doesn't look like strike doubling to me, but what do I know? The douling is south of last 8 of 1868. And if I'm not mistaken, there is doubling southwest of 6 as well. Thank you for your help.:bow:

    http://s181.photobucket.com/albums/x314/coinman101/?action=view&current=shieldRPDnickel003.jpg

    http://s181.photobucket.com/albums/x314/coinman101/?action=view&current=shieldRPDnickel006.jpg

    http://s181.photobucket.com/albums/x314/coinman101/?action=view&current=shieldRPDnickel007.jpg
     
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  3. hamman88

    hamman88 Spare some change, sir?

    The pics arent that great. But it is 100% looking like a RPD. Is one listed in the Cherrypickers?
     
  4. clembo

    clembo A closed mind is no mind


    Could be hamman88 but that series is rife with RPDs. Go into a coin shop or show that has a good selection of Shield Nickels with a 16X loupe. You'll probably find one or more.

    You will actually find that in a lot of the coins from that period. Two cent pieces and Three cent nickels had their share. I have several 1871/71 Two Cent pieces. Listed as "rare" but can't say I agree. A good loupe will find a lot of this stuff.
     
  5. coinman101

    coinman101 Collector Of All Coins

    So does anyone know if this this date having an RPD will assign nickel additional value?
     
  6. clembo

    clembo A closed mind is no mind

    I highly doubt it unless you find the right buyer.
     
  7. Shortgapbob

    Shortgapbob Emerging Numismatist

    RPDs are common on Shield Nickels, and there are a bunch of them for the 1868. Yours looks like a RPD to me, but I wouldn't really assign any premium to it. A specialist may pay you a few extra dollars for it, but thats about it.

    Nice find though. I like looking for varieties like that.
     
  8. bruce 1947

    bruce 1947 Support Or Troops

    Coinman.
    If you are talking about the 1868 that is on page #224 then I would say you maybe right, however these are very common in shield nickels, and if you look you will see also that the interest rating in very low on this nickel. How there are some that might pay more if they needed it however there is no way to tell unless you try.You did say you got this coin in ex-fine for $10.00 then you got a very good deal because a ex-40 in this year sells for about $50.00 to $60.00 you did get a good deal.

    BRUCE.
     
  9. Treashunt

    Treashunt The Other Frank

    What Bruce said!
    I agree.
     
  10. hamman88

    hamman88 Spare some change, sir?

    I was pretty jealous when I saw he bought that, I didn't that good at my purchases.
     
  11. coinman101

    coinman101 Collector Of All Coins

    Yeah, but you also didn't buy a bent Capped Bust half dime for $15.:headbang:
     
  12. Treashunt

    Treashunt The Other Frank

    Looks like the Cherrypickers #FS#5 - 003.7
    URS-9
    Interest *** (out of 5 stars)
     
  13. coinman101

    coinman101 Collector Of All Coins

    According to this: http://www.shieldnickels.net/cpg/cpg.htm, it's worth $75 in EF condition. However, my nickel has a very minor corrsion spots. Also, nothing sells for what it's listed at. I tried few searching ebay for an 1868 rpd in every way, hardly anything came up. Anyone know what my nickel might be worth?
     
  14. mark_h

    mark_h Somewhere over the rainbow

    As stated before I think repunched dates are very common and most sellers will not even list RPD. Looks yours is different from mine. I bought mine because of this die crack - mine is F/VF. I have maybe 3 or 4 1868's. The question is is it a reverse of 1868 - I think that adds a little premium too, but only for someone shopping for these. To see if it is a reverse of 1868 look at the star at 12:00 position - if it points to the E in states it the reverse of 1867. If it points to S then it is reverse of 1868 - which according to the CP guide this makes up about 10% of the population. Depending on the corrosion on how some might price it.
     

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  15. mark_h

    mark_h Somewhere over the rainbow

    Was just looking at heritage - XF corroded coins went 30-40, but depending on your coin in could be less. You saw very few 1868's with attributes on the holders.
     
  16. coinman101

    coinman101 Collector Of All Coins

    It's got the reverse of a an 1867.
     
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