Hi welcome to CT. I think you will find that most of these guys that are experts that you need to help you. They are going to ask you for obverse and reverse also they will ask you to crop out all background. And select full image when you post them I'm also new so I don't believe I'll take a stab at that one. Dave
I can't tell anything from those blurry zoomed pictures. You would get many more educated evaluations if you were to post full pictures that are not blurry beyond recognition. As of now, it looks like a completely normal quarter to me.
That's a regular clad quarter the 1970 on a 1941 Canadian is thus far unique and is a proof coin not a business strike.
Why do you think it is a 1941 Canadian Planchet? I can't see any evidence of the Canadian coin from your pictures.
I'm pretty sure it's because one of those click bait articles about finding coins worth tons of money in your pocket change reported on the 1970 proof quarter that was over struck on a 1941 Canadian quarter. So as usual everyone who reads it and then finds a coin with that date shows up posting thinking they struck it big.
Well the the reason is because it's not clear it's it's very faint you can barely see it. With that said the only way to really see it is with the camera and sometimes it's it's hard with that but they say if you could barely see it you have one in it I see it it's there
That Canadian/ US quarter could have been accidental. (I suspect chicanery.) But why would there be more than 1? Someone would have to put a 1941 Canadian quarter in with the 1970 quarter planchets. Why would they put 2 of them in there if they are trying to create a one of a kind rarity? That coin had to come from a mint worker. Either accidentally or on purpose. It makes no sense for a 1941 Canadian to be in with 1970 quarter planchets. I am going to go out on a limb and guess that your quarter is not minted over a 1941 Canadian, spend it.
Check the edge of the coin for a band of copper. The Canadian quarter would not have the copper, a regular planchet would.
If I'm not mistaken, the 1941 Canadian quarter planchets were made of silver. The quarter that you have has a clad color to it and thus, cannot possibly be the error in question. Also, this error was only on proof quarters, not business strike quarters like yours looks to be. You have clearly been misinformed but the only way to tell for sure what you have, would be clearer pictures.
Here is a photo. I thought there was only 1, it appears there were a handful of these. You can see the Canadian quarter through the US. And as USCC4 has stated they are ONLY on 1970-S quarters.