1943 p steel is it overweight?

Discussion in 'What's it Worth' started by wolfater2879, Oct 7, 2017.

  1. wolfater2879

    wolfater2879 New Member

    I have a 1943 p steel cent it weighs 3.0 on the scale is this overweight? or is this within tolerance?
     
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  3. tommyc03

    tommyc03 Senior Member

    It should weigh 2.70 grams, so it could be from some thicker stock.
     
  4. wolfater2879

    wolfater2879 New Member

    has anyone else gotten a 1945 3.0 gram before?
     
  5. desertgem

    desertgem Senior Errer Collecktor Supporter

    Did you check the scale? Take any cent before 1982 and weigh it. It has a nominal weight of 3.11 . If the scale reads that correctly, then it eliminates one possible error area. if the scale only reads zero or one digit to the right of the decimal point, then it is rounding and won't be accurate.
     
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  6. wolfater2879

    wolfater2879 New Member

    weighed 1 1979 cent it weighs 3.1 g weighed 1943 its 3.0 g
     
  7. l.cutler

    l.cutler Member

    Has the cent been re-plated? That may have added the extra weight.
     
  8. wolfater2879

    wolfater2879 New Member

    no, it appears to be the original,very old looking coin
     
  9. wolfater2879

    wolfater2879 New Member

    so this leaves me with the original question, is this too far out of spec or do I discard back into the billions of cent ive gone through during the years
     
  10. desertgem

    desertgem Senior Errer Collecktor Supporter

    Personally, before you do that , I would recommend having someone with a more precise scale weigh it. Do you know any jeweler, science teacher, gold dealer, etc. that could weigh it. Since electronic scales generally round the last digit, I would do this before I either threw it away or pay to have an expert examine it.

    As a side note, you can look at the edge of the coin, and if it appears the same as the surfaces (obv) & (rev) in general than it has been replated. The edge was not zinc plated when issued, but when replated outside of the mint, they did the whole coin. Jim
     
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  11. wolfater2879

    wolfater2879 New Member

    I know a pawn shop guy that could do that, ill run it by him on monday
     
  12. BooksB4Coins

    BooksB4Coins Newbieus Sempiterna

    Perhaps you could post a quick photo?
     
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  13. wolfater2879

    wolfater2879 New Member

  14. wolfater2879

    wolfater2879 New Member

  15. Michael K

    Michael K Well-Known Member

    Here is a 2 year old post from Condor 101
    "There were two weight standards for the steel cent. The early ones were 2.689 grams, the ones later in the year were 2.754 grams. The tolerance range was .13 grams +/-. "
    So lets say this was a late year coin. 2.754+.13= 2.884
    I don't think your coin being over by .116 of a gram is that big of a deal.
    It's interesting, but it's not worth much.
    Going off the picture it is steel and not copper.
     
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  16. wolfater2879

    wolfater2879 New Member

    and just to let you know it weighs 46 grains which equals 2.95 grams. which if you go by the standard 2.75-2.95 will equal .20 which is over the tolerance of +/- .13 by 7
     
    Last edited: Oct 8, 2017
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  17. wolfater2879

    wolfater2879 New Member

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