1943 Steel Penny Die Error

Discussion in 'Error Coins' started by Tony Taylor, Mar 6, 2019.

  1. Tony Taylor

    Tony Taylor New Member

    1943 Steel Penny Die Error And I was just wanting to know a little about this coin.
     

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  3. LaCointessa

    LaCointessa Well-Known Member

    Welcome to CoinTalk @Tony Taylor !

    I am not one of the CoinTalk experts; but, I will say that it appears to me that sometime after the coin left the mint, someone began to bore a hole into the bottom of the reverse side of the coin. The bottom of the reverse side of the coin corresponds to the top of the obverse (front/heads) side of the coin. Apparently the person did not bore completely through the coin, but I can see where the metal on the head of Lincoln is pushed out toward us from the pressure used to bore on the reverse side.

    I believe that is all that happened to your coin and that it is not an error of any sort - simply damage caused by a human after the coin was minted.

    I hope that information is correct. Our experts will stop by and correct me if I have not explained this properly.
     
  4. ldhair

    ldhair Clean Supporter

    I believe your coin has been plated and damaged after it left the US mint. It's not an error. Welcome to CT.
     
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  5. Michael K

    Michael K Well-Known Member

    The die makes thousands of coins, 100,000 or more. If the error was on the die there would be 100,000 of these coins. Your coin is damaged. If it has been reprocessed, (as Larry says and at a glance, I agree) then the value is 1 cent.
     
  6. paddyman98

    paddyman98 I'm a professional expert in specializing! Supporter

    PMD - Post Mint Damage
    Not a Die Error.. Not a Mint Error
     
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  7. Tony Taylor

    Tony Taylor New Member

    If you all look closely above one cent at the top all letters is doubled die, you can see the other s clear the other letters not so good. And it’s not been drilled, something has pressed it
     
  8. Tony Taylor

    Tony Taylor New Member

    Here is what I’m talking about
     

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  9. Xlacrash

    Xlacrash New Member

    32265CEE-309E-4464-A084-84E387C22002.jpeg 98B6EA08-9A91-4AE2-8731-C8FCDB19EAEA.jpeg Can anyone render an opinion on this one. I found in a relative’s collection...
     
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  10. LaCointessa

    LaCointessa Well-Known Member

    Hiya @Xlacrash - Welcome to CoinTalk.

    Usually, it is best to ask for comments and opinions on a coin you have by starting a thread dedicated to that particular coin. I recommend that you begin a new thread if you don't get an opinion by one of our experts quickly. I think, I am almost positive, that asking about your coin in another's thread is what they call "hijacking." Now, I do see that the OP @Tony Taylor has "liked" your comment so he doesn't seem offended by you asking about your coin while he is trying to get his questions answered. I just bring that up, with all due respect, in case you had not considered it.

    As to your coin, it is notated on the 'flip' the word "Processed" and if I were a betting person (which I am not) I would bet that the term refers to the fact that your coin, like the OP's coin, has been plated to give it that highly silver color. I bet the plating is the processing referred to. And if I am correct about your coin being plated, that processing or plating occurred after the coin left the mint.
     
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  11. paddyman98

    paddyman98 I'm a professional expert in specializing! Supporter

    When a 1943 Cent is reprocessed you will see that effect of doubling. It is not a Doubled Die.

    Nope.
     
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  12. paddyman98

    paddyman98 I'm a professional expert in specializing! Supporter

    It is called a Dent. The Cent was hit on the Reverse side with a blunt object causing the Obverse to be flattened where you mentioned. Then it was reprocessed. But Tony keeps insisting that it is a Mint error and DD Variety.
     
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  13. Xlacrash

    Xlacrash New Member

    Sorry for “hijacking” your post Tony. Lesson learned
     
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  14. Michael K

    Michael K Well-Known Member

    What Paddy said. Once it has been reprocessed, that doubling is not doubled die doubling.
     
  15. Fred Weinberg

    Fred Weinberg Well-Known Member

    ...nothing to add to the above numerous observations.
     
  16. capthank

    capthank Well-Known Member

    Good explanation about how to and why to start a new topic. Thanks
     
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  17. Mountain Man

    Mountain Man Well-Known Member

    Nice job LaCointessa. You are pretty much on the money (no pun intended). The OPs coins is PMD and was reprocessed.
     
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  18. Spark1951

    Spark1951 Accomplishment, not Activity

    @LaCointessa ...great explanation.

    @Tony Taylor ...replating negated any value beyond FV, except as a novelty, which is commonly done by some coin shops nation wide. Yours may have been a test/sample coin, drilled into to reveal/prove that the core was steel, rendering it worthless beyond face, and then released into the wild, imo. I have some too (without the drill hole)...and the reprocessing has left many anomalies with the design elements.

    Hope this helps you understand...Spark
     
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