Post your Lincolns!

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by New Gen. Nick, Oct 4, 2011.

?

Do you like the new pennies?

  1. OH YEAH BABY.

    31.8%
  2. ew no.

    68.2%
  1. giorgio11

    giorgio11 Senior Numismatist

    Ron if you find it I will give you at least 50 bucks for it! :)

    Kind regards,

    George
     
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  3. giorgio11

    giorgio11 Senior Numismatist

    1c 1935 MS65RB Both Sides.jpg

    1935 MS65RB PCGS

    1c 1936-D MS66RB PCGS TrueView 80450350.jpg

    1936-D MS66RB PCGS

    Kind regards,

    George
     
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  4. dwhiz

    dwhiz Collector Supporter

    Nothing special but nice for an almost 30 year old Zincoln found in change.
    1989 1-horz.jpg
     
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  5. giorgio11

    giorgio11 Senior Numismatist

    1c 1939-S MS64BN PCGS TrueView 83664137.jpg

    1939-S MS64BN PCGS

    1c 1940-D MS66RB PCGS Obv CU.jpg

    1c 1940-D MS66RB PCGS Rev CU.jpg

    1940-D MS66RB PCGS

    Kind regards,

    George
     
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  6. Coppercat

    Coppercat New Member

    IMG_0488.JPG Here is a pic of the 81s, reverse. Zoom in for unc evidence. There are three cleaned, and an 80 shown, same casual storage, for comparison. The only blemishes are what ever occured as they sat. Way too vivid as a wrapper reaction. Webbed and splotched due to dissimilar metal reaction? Incomplete mixing leaves one with what you started with, two different metals. Some is alloyed, to an extent, hence, a lesser corrosive reaction. The splotching is inconsistant, because the planchet has unknown ratios of zinc/copper throughout. A simple way to imagine what happened, is mixing chocolate syrup with milk, but not stirring very well. Badly mixed marble cake, another, just sayin...
    Those colors, as well as my avitar, are not stains! It is the color of the planchet itself, in each particular "spot", blue, red/blue. Some edges, most, are not soft edged as one would expect with "staining". If the planchet were absorbant, the spots would be puffy edged. Also, since when does brass alloy pennies "stain", permanently, saturated and unremovable? From a kid on, myself and millions of others, using only saliva, rubbing, erasers, you name it, had made zillions of them look like "new" again. Tar was tough, mind you, but I've never shined one up that resulted in a look like these 81s, not even close..There is an error site that addresses bad alloy mix, from no mixing at all to almost mixed, just saying.
    It's gonna take some time, skeptics abound, inferences too, unstandably. Anyway, again, OMR, amateur storage, unc, untainted, honest discovery. It remains something to look closer at. Marbled in folks, that's what Im seeing. Again, Wilmington De area, open for inspection..Meantime, scope and look, a mirad of hues, zinc blue, copper red, radical blending, blue and red make purple, etc., etc....
     
  7. BadThad

    BadThad Calibrated for Lincolns

    There is no alloy issue. What you're seeing is simply the result of poor storage. I've opened a few hundred improperly stored rolls and they looked exactly like yours.
     
  8. giorgio11

    giorgio11 Senior Numismatist

    And we now return to our regularly scheduled programming:

    1c 1946-D MS65RB Small Trueview 82296420.jpg

    1946-D MS65RB PCGS

    1c 1948 MS65RB Small Trueview Style 15329086.jpg
    1948 MS65RB PCGS

    Kind regards,

    George
     
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  9. Kentucky

    Kentucky Well-Known Member

  10. BadThad

    BadThad Calibrated for Lincolns

  11. CircCam

    CircCam Victory

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  12. mas4492

    mas4492 Junior Member

    Switched cameras. NGC MS64RB...
    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]
     
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  13. Kentucky

    Kentucky Well-Known Member

    Wow, the finish on that coin almost makes it look like some of the post 1982 Zinclns.
     
  14. BadThad

    BadThad Calibrated for Lincolns

    64? Harsh grade! That's a beautiful example!!
     
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  15. BadThad

    BadThad Calibrated for Lincolns

    I'll trade you even! :p

    Never sent this one in for fear of a possible MS-63 grade, I'd rather see it in an AU-58 holder - where I personally think it belongs:

    1918LincolnCleve.jpg 1918LincolnCleveREV.jpg
     
    Last edited: May 5, 2018
  16. BadThad

    BadThad Calibrated for Lincolns

    The pictures above is how it looks in hand. It looks nothing like these pictures....but..... if you angle the camera and light, there are signs of rub that aren't readily apparent in hand.

    AU-58 candidate?

    1918LincolnCleve2.jpg 1918LincolnCleveREV2.jpg
     
  17. 05Wildcats

    05Wildcats Well-Known Member

    I think it would be an AU-58.
     
  18. mas4492

    mas4492 Junior Member

    "AU-58 candidate?"
    MS60+....'cabinet friction'.
     
  19. Pickin and Grinin

    Pickin and Grinin Well-Known Member

    Those are some pretty cool die markers from the C and through the center of the O.
     
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  20. BadThad

    BadThad Calibrated for Lincolns

    Yup, that's kind of how I call it too....but I want a 58!
     
  21. mas4492

    mas4492 Junior Member

    Registry Set?
     
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