What quality control?

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by Roman Collector, Mar 4, 2018.

  1. TypeCoin971793

    TypeCoin971793 Just a random guy on the internet

    A shoddy Gallienus

    D335376E-0C4E-4C9F-A75B-6C0AF58FDF0F.jpeg F5F5175B-B92D-43CF-ACBF-986091C39265.jpeg
     
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  3. Ken Dorney

    Ken Dorney Yea, I'm Cool That Way...

    Quality control issues are most typically (on average) related to the general need for immediate coinage. The greater the need, often the lower the quality. When one needs to produce as much coinage as possible in a very small time frame, quality suffers. I have this example, where obviously the minters were going so fast they did not center the flan on the dies properly. The photo doesn't show how extreme it is, but I think you get the idea:

    00032x00.jpg
     
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  4. dougsmit

    dougsmit Member

    Perfect coins may be beautiful and bring rewards in the marketplace but these really awful ones are much more educational when it comes to technical features of mint operation. Ken's Tetricus is terrible and wonderful at the same time. It gives a 3D view of the shape of the die that struck it and shows without doubt that the obverse was on the punch die while the reverse was on the flat anvil. This is the opposite of the common practice of earlier periods and explains why we find reverse brockages of the Tetricus period since coins got stuck in the obverse punch and went unnoticed when the next coin was struck. This Comes Avg is a reverse type used by Victorinus.
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  5. Alegandron

    Alegandron "ΤΩΙ ΚΡΑΤΙΣΤΩΙ..." ΜΕΓΑΣ ΑΛΕΞΑΝΔΡΟΣ, June 323 BCE

    Personally, when Rome moved off minting Denarii... coinage went downhill.

    They pressed a little too hard on the Cookie Dough!
    Samnium Aesernia AE21 263-240 BCE HN Italy 430 Vulcan - Biga Obv-Rev.JPG
    Samnium Aesernia AE21 263-240 BCE HN Italy 430 Vulcan - Biga


    Need to trim the Sprue (actually it is the GATE)
    Sicily Syracuse Timoleon Third Deocracy 344-317 BCE AE Hemidrachm Zeus Thundrbolt.JPG
    Sicily Syracuse Timoleon Third Deocracy 344-317 BCE AE Hemidrachm Zeus Thundrbolt
     
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  6. ancient coin hunter

    ancient coin hunter 3rd Century Usurper

    Tetricus II, off-center, esp. the reverse.

    tetricus1.jpg

    tetricus2.jpg
     
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  7. panzerman

    panzerman Well-Known Member

    Here is one I have in my collection/ a modern milled badly struck AV Souverain d'or 1749 Antwerpen Mint (cracked dies) on obverse 2fe275c226ee7d05f7e31a54253c9bfc.jpg 994ce2f6bf496dcda526b1dd6126346e.jpg
    Austrian Netherlands
    Maria Theresia 1740-80
     
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  8. dlhill132

    dlhill132 Member

  9. Nerva

    Nerva Well-Known Member

    I just saw a nice display of ancient 'error coins' at the Eretz Israel museum in Tel Aviv. It was hard to get pictures through the glare on the glass, but here are a couple of striking examples (apologies for bad pun as well as bad pictures).
    IMG_2013 (2).JPG IMG_2015 (2).JPG
     
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  10. gsimonel

    gsimonel Well-Known Member

    but I liked your pun . . .
     
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