2002 P quarter

Discussion in 'Error Coins' started by Avery G., Jul 12, 2019.

  1. Avery G.

    Avery G. Active Member

    2019-7-10 12-43-30.jpg 2019-7-10 12-42-34.jpg 2019-7-4 16-40-25.jpg 20190704_090650.jpg 20190704_090650-1.jpg
    Edge and rim errors occur when collars are either out of position or are deteriorated. A wire rim occurs when excessive pressure squeezes out metal between the collar and the edge of the die producing an extremely high thin rim.

    A partial collar occurs when an out-of-position collar leaves a line around the coin which is visible when looking at its edge. A partial collar is sometimes called a railroad rim when a reeded edge coin is involved as the line resembles a rail and the reeds resemble railroad. The coin has a thin rim and apears to have a crack around the rim. There is also a line around the edge. Which gives the appearance of railroad tracks. The coin is in good condition. Any opinions?
     
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  3. Avery G.

    Avery G. Active Member

    View attachment 964749 View attachment 964750 View attachment 964751 View attachment 964752 View attachment 964753
    Edge and rim errors occur when collars are either out of position or are deteriorated. A wire rim occurs when excessive pressure squeezes out metal between the collar and the edge of the die producing an extremely high thin rim.

    A partial collar occurs when an out-of-position collar leaves a line around the coin which is visible when looking at its edge. A partial collar is sometimes called a railroad rim when a reeded edge coin is involved as the line resembles a rail and the reeds resemble railroad. The coin has a thin rim and apears to have a crack around the rim. There is also a line around the edge. Which gives the appearance of railroad tracks. The coin is in good condition. Any opinions?
     
  4. Avery G.

    Avery G. Active Member

    Just wanted to submit another pic of the edge.
     

    Attached Files:

  5. Seattlite86

    Seattlite86 Outspoken Member

    You should be able to see reeding on the rim of a partial collar coin. Example here: https://coinauctionshelp.com/collar-die-clash-mint-error/

    Also, what you called wire rim is correctly known as a finned rim: http://www.error-ref.com/finning/

    I’m happy to see you searching out and using definitions for errors. Keep reading and learning! Www.error-ref.com is my favorite and best resource for learning about errors.

    Your photo quality could use some work; most photo issues deal with lighting and camera positioning issues. And please post them as full images after uploading (the button option will appear after you upload a photo).

    Also, we like to be very precise in numismatics. “Good condition” is actually not a great thing. See here: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sheldon_coin_grading_scale

    Hope I wasn’t too critical; I’m glad to see you researching and investigating. :)
     
    Pickin and Grinin likes this.
  6. Pickin and Grinin

    Pickin and Grinin Well-Known Member

    I am at finned rim, this is also associated with off center and miss aligned dies.

    One thing though a collar clash with a reeded collar will always leave an evident reeded impression.
     
  7. happy_collector

    happy_collector Well-Known Member

    While I like the rim errors description, I don't think the 2002 Tennessee quarter is showing either partial collar or finned rim, imho.

    Here is one of my partial collar quarter.
    2013ATBSide01.jpg

    And my finned rim nickel before slab (NGC calls it Excess Pressure Strike)
    xx02.jpg
     
  8. lordmarcovan

    lordmarcovan 48-year collector Moderator

    Merged the two duplicate threads into one.
     
    Seattlite86 likes this.
  9. Seattlite86

    Seattlite86 Outspoken Member

    Superb examples. I've yet to find either in the wild. Thanks for sharing. I was of the exact same opinion, but could barely see the coin with my smartphone.
     
    happy_collector likes this.
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