83 D lincoln cent, 2.74 grams ??

Discussion in 'Coin Roll Hunting' started by Scrapper J., May 1, 2018.

  1. Scrapper J.

    Scrapper J. New Member

    I recently found an 83 d lincoln penny that weighs 2.74 grams and is not magnetic so it is not on a zinc coated steel planchet from 43. Can anyone tell me what this might be?
     
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  3. rickmp

    rickmp Frequently flatulent.

    It's copper plated zinc. You have an ordinary penny.
     
  4. *coins

    *coins Well-Known Member

    Um...zinc coated steel cents were made in 1943 only and never since or before. Not sure where you are getting that from. Neither zinc nor copper cents are magnetic. A photo would help. :)

    Copper - 3.11 grams
    Zinc - 2.5 grams

    Anything above 2.5 grams is zinc (unless it is really dirty or has some foreign matter on it). Your scale could be off as well.
     
    Last edited: May 1, 2018
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  5. ldhair

    ldhair Clean Supporter

    You have the weights backwards.
     
  6. *coins

    *coins Well-Known Member

    Oops, sorry about that. Typing too fast I guess.
     
  7. desertgem

    desertgem Senior Errer Collecktor Supporter

    Zincoln can be between 2.40-2.60 grams. Inexpensive digital scales have calibration woes and rounding off that sometimes faulty. Use a known calibration weight to calibrate scale if closeness is important. Photos should show if corrosion has added to weight. Jim
     
  8. Scrapper J.

    Scrapper J. New Member

     
  9. *coins

    *coins Well-Known Member

  10. Scrapper J.

    Scrapper J. New Member

    Its not the scale. I have a 100 gram weight and calibrate it often. And there is no dirt or foreign matter on the coin. It weighs 2.74 grams.
     
  11. desertgem

    desertgem Senior Errer Collecktor Supporter

    But you are not measuring things in that range. For that calibrate it with a .10 or .05 gram weight since the difference you are talking about is close to that level. What is the resolution of the scale ? Jim
     
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  12. Scrapper J.

    Scrapper J. New Member

    I have a 100 gram calibration weight for my scale and calibrate it often.and there is no dirt or foreign matter or corrosion on the coin whatsoever so I am quite bewildered as to what It may be.
     
  13. Scrapper J.

    Scrapper J. New Member

    Its a reloading scale for weighing gun powder and weighs in either grains or grams.
     
  14. Scrapper J.

    Scrapper J. New Member

    Ok if its an ordinary penny, can you tell me where I can see other examples of this same penny weighing the same?
     
  15. USCoinCollector42

    USCoinCollector42 Well-Known Member

    Can we see some pictures? It might have just been struck on an overweight planchet (zinc cents should weigh around 2.5g but occasionally are struck out of mint tolerance).
     
    Last edited: May 1, 2018
  16. Scrapper J.

    Scrapper J. New Member

    Thank you all for your help.Just an ordinary penny I guess.
     
  17. desertgem

    desertgem Senior Errer Collecktor Supporter

    Post a photo of the coin on the scale also please. Jim
     
  18. USCoinCollector42

    USCoinCollector42 Well-Known Member

    It might be an overweight planchet error. Pictures of the coin on a scale would help us determine that.
     
  19. Scrapper J.

    Scrapper J. New Member

    So if it was struck out of mint tolerances, would it be considered an error coin?
     
  20. desertgem

    desertgem Senior Errer Collecktor Supporter

    Any premium would be determined by the relative amount off tolerance.
     
  21. Scrapper J.

    Scrapper J. New Member

    Ok so if a coin was a weight or transitional error or whatever the case may be, its value would be determined by how far it is out of the mints tolerances. Thanks very much for your time.Hope i want too much of a pain. Lol
     
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