1990 no s

Discussion in 'Error Coins' started by Willysilver, Oct 31, 2017.

  1. Willysilver

    Willysilver HEADS UP

    I found this today they said check all 1990 no mint marks so i did ? What do u guys think
     

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  3. Willysilver

    Willysilver HEADS UP

    Reverse
     

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  4. cpm9ball

    cpm9ball CANNOT RE-MEMBER

    The 1990 "No S" Lincoln that is worth money is a proof coin.

    Chris
     
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  5. paddyman98

    paddyman98 I'm a professional expert in specializing! Supporter

    You broke your record.. now you have 4 threads on the same Cent :yack:
    4x.JPG
     
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  6. Willysilver

    Willysilver HEADS UP

    My bad i apologize FROM the heart
     
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  7. Willysilver

    Willysilver HEADS UP

    I know theres differnt types of proof coins tgough so its worth advice the penny is well struck the fields are clean and the strik(e is strong worth a shot
     
  8. Willysilver

    Willysilver HEADS UP

    rev of the 1990
    Screenshot_2017-10-31-06-15-11.png
     
  9. lordmarcovan

    lordmarcovan 48-year collector Moderator

    As @cpm9ball mentioned, the only 1990 Lincoln with no "S" that's worth anything is a proof. They only struck proofs at San Francisco that year, and all proofs should have gotten the "S" mintmark, but a few which were released in proof sets did not. Those are the rare ones.

    A regular business strike coin from Philadelphia, on the other hand, would not have a mintmark. That is perfectly normal for those.

    Your coin is a regular business strike Lincoln, not a proof. It was struck at Philadelphia, so it did not get an "S" mintmark (and wasn't supposed to). It is worth one cent.

    A proof coin would be struck on a polished blank with extra pressure, and have deeply mirrored fields, a frosty portrait, and a very squared-off edge.

    Once you learn the difference, it's pretty obvious.

    See the difference here?

    The coin on the left is a business strike.

    The one on the right is a proof strike.

    [​IMG]
    Images courtesy of Dave's Collectible Coins
     
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  10. Willysilver

    Willysilver HEADS UP

    Just though id shate this with you
     
  11. ldhair

    ldhair Clean Supporter

    Your coin is not a proof. The folks above gave you the correct information.
     
  12. cpm9ball

    cpm9ball CANNOT RE-MEMBER

    You're absolutely right! There are pennies, nickels, dimes, quarters, half dollars and even dollars coins that are proofs.

    Chris
     
  13. TheFinn

    TheFinn Well-Known Member

    Yes, like matte, satin and mirrored. But since 1936 they have only made mirrored. The cameo mirrored proofs started consistently in 1971 or so.
     
  14. furryfrog02

    furryfrog02 Well-Known Member

    I think that you sir, need to study harder.
     
  15. Willysilver

    Willysilver HEADS UP

    Ok thanks everyone but its a damn good 1990 penny wortb about 1cent
     
  16. Willysilver

    Willysilver HEADS UP

  17. 19Lyds

    19Lyds Member of the United States of Confusion

    I see I'm a little late to the thread but here goes anyway.

    No. It's not even worth a shot because "Proof" is a manufacturing process and not simply a "well struck coin". The value in the 1990 No S Lincoln is the fact that the proof coins are supposed to go thru an extensive QA Process to insure that no mistakes are made. The slipped thru.

    In 1990, Philadelphia did not put a "P" mintmark on the Lincolns they produced. For that matter, a P mintmark has NEVER been put on a Lincoln Cent until this specific year which marks the 225 Anniversary of the US Mint.

    What you have is a Lincoln Cent manufactured at the Philadelphia Mint and you can buy rolls and rolls of them in BU condition for about 7-10 bucks.
     
  18. lordmarcovan

    lordmarcovan 48-year collector Moderator

    I fail to see what the PCGS webinar about grading proof coins has to do with anything in this thread, since your coin is NOT a proof.
     
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