Guess the Error. 1979 Ten Centavos......

Discussion in 'Error Coins' started by SensibleSal66, Feb 11, 2026 at 1:02 PM.

  1. SensibleSal66

    SensibleSal66 U.S Casual Collector / Error Collector

    Hello all collectors! I saw this error coin online and thought it was very awesome. Can you guess the error here and how did it occur?
    10centavos1973-tile.jpg
     
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  3. Pickin and Grinin

    Pickin and Grinin Well-Known Member

    It was struck off center w a partial brockage.
     
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  4. SensibleSal66

    SensibleSal66 U.S Casual Collector / Error Collector

    Huh. I can't hear you. :p
    Tell the newbies what a "partial brockage" is? How did it happen? :confused:
     
  5. alurid

    alurid Well-Known Member

    One previously struck coin ( on bottom, Brockage coin, not shown) and a new planchet (ontop) were in the coining chamber at the same time, and both were struck together.
    Is this close to correct?
     
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  6. Pickin and Grinin

    Pickin and Grinin Well-Known Member

    A brockage is technically a die cap, a coin that was previously struck stuck to the die face. Now the die face that is in this case supposed to be the obverse, has a coin stuck to it. The coin that is stuck acts like a new die face and strikes more coins until it gets thinned out or falls off. The OP's coin shows that the coin that became stuck only partially covered the die face.
    Below is from Error Reference.
    https://www.error-ref.com/page/2/?s=Brockage
    Brockage: Partial
    PART VI. Striking Errors:
    Brockages:
    Partial Brockage:


    Definition: A brockage is an incuse, mirror-image version of the design that is generated when a coin (or other struck piece of metal) is struck into a planchet or another coin. A partial brockage occurs when there is partial overlap between the two discs involved.

    This 1980 cent has a partial brockage of the reverse design on its obverse face. A previously-struck coin overlapped the planchet represented by this cent. This coin was struck fully within the collar. The increased effective striking
    pressure caused by the intrusive coin produced some “horizontal lipping”, as coin metal squeezed over the top of the fully-deployed collar. Many coins with partial brockages are struck out-of-collar (broadstruck).
     
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  7. Sharkbait46737

    Sharkbait46737 Well-Known Member

    I could have sworn it was parking lot damage! Thanks for posting and the info.
     
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  8. SensibleSal66

    SensibleSal66 U.S Casual Collector / Error Collector

    Nope. just another cool error from the 70's. :p
     
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