Hello again after 15 years. I have this strange SBA in my collection. Annoyingly, I can't even remember how it got there, I bought some lots of coins about 5 years ago and I think it might have shown up in there. It appears to be a close copy of a SBA, but the art is just slightly different. It is medal turn instead of coin turn. There is no "one dollar" on the reverse. It is clad, which I find odd if it was just a simple copy. Weight is a little heavy at 8.67 grams. I just can't wrap my head around why someone would create this, it is very well done. Someone spent a lot of money to make this. It seems so ridiculous to make this I have to entertain the possibility that this could be a pattern, of which I can find no record of. But even so, it should still have "one dollar" on it. Thoughts? Possible arcade token? Sorry for the slightly blurry photos.
https://forums.collectors.com/discussion/1013340/counterfeit-susan-b-anthony-dollars http://www.smalldollars.com/dollar/add014.html
Welcome back! I echo the thoughts of this being weird. The counterfeits linked by @Mr. Numismatist look more crude and intended to circulate. The example posted here has a proof (prooflike) look and is missing the "One Dollar" inscription like the OP mentioned. My first thought was a private mint like Gallery Mint or Dan Carr but I don't believe either made something like this.
Those counterfeits posted are low effort casts. Someone spent a lot of money to engrave these dies and get clad blanks. Additionally someone who went through all that effort would have presumably made a lot of these, so its strange we have not seen these before. Yes, the fields are nearly proof like.
I posted this thread on the PCGS forums as well in case someone there knows: https://forums.collectors.com/discussion/1119322/fake-susan-b-anthony-dollar-or-something-else/p1
Not a Daniel Carr because he doesn't use a real date and they made SBA's in 1999. Seems to be a decent quality, and I think it's a keeper. Just label it counterfeit. I bet it is worth more than a dollar. ($3-$5 I guess.) Here's my counterfeit quarter I found in a Coin Star. At first I was disappointed and then I realized THIS IS EVEN BETTER!
He has used real dates but usually the design is different (for example, he made 1958 memorial cents when that was the last year of the wheat cents).
A 1958 Memorial is not a real US Mint coin. And so it's not a real date for that coin type which is what I was saying. 1919 is a real date, but not for a Peace Dollar, etc.
A better example would be a 1942 Jefferson nickel. It's a real date that had the same general design but there were none with 3 mintmarks (and none that were struck with the silver alloy).
https://www.cointalk.com/threads/susan-b-anthony-dollar-with-no-denomination.245011/ This was brought up before. So more do exist. Rare enough that no one has really done any sort of write up on these counterfeits, IMO the highest quality counterfeit since the henning nickel, at least for purposes of being spent.