I found this today while looking thru some sets... not sure if it's called a die break or a die crack... either way, looks pretty cool.
Nice die crack on a proof coin.... A die break would be a cud or retained cud, although some do use the term interchangeably
That is a nice radial die crack. It depends upon what someone is willing to pay. It could be greater if two bidiots get into a bidding war; it could be a lot less if only one person is interested in it. Chris
Nice example of a die crack.... not much of a premium there....a good teaching tool though. Also very uncommon on a modern proof... so there is that extra bump in premium. No idea what someone will pay though....
Some people use them interchangeably, and improperly. A die crack means exactly that, the die has a crack in it. A die break means a piece of the die has actually broken off of the die ie. the die is now in more than one piece.
You're kind of contradicting yourself here... Not too often to find a die crack on a proof. I think this holds a premium, the question is how much.
I wonder how many coins were struck with this die before it was retired. I could see many examples struck with a business die but not many with a proof die.
Its interesting because they strike the proofs multiple times the crack is very defined. Oh. Contact JC Stevens at cuds on coins. Its a website and this is a new variety. Hasnt been discovered yet.
Thank you SorenCoins for this information. I will contact them and keep you posted as to what happens... Thanks again.
I thought the proofs were examined and the defects not sold to collectors? Does that make this, rarer than an average die crack?
Follow up on submission of coin to http://cuds-on-coins.com/attributions-guide-on-what-to-do/ it is now listed under unusual die cracks on us coins. It is listed as UDC-1c-2009S (V3)-01. Also, he explained the following..."It is not a Spike Head as the Die Crack fails to enter the head. All “SPIKE HEADS” will have a die crack from the rim into any portion of the bust’s head". Any thoughts on this being sent in for grading of this variety?
I'd say it would probably cost you more than the coin is worth, and they won't list that variety designation on the slab.