I'm not sure. Can you take a picture of the edge? Side view. Even Tapered Planchets have pretty good strikes. Here is an example from my collection.
Not necessarily. Picture a coin blank being punched out of a large coil strip of material having a partial void. The coin continues on until it meets the die heads and the coin appears as in the picture. Check the obverse at the 5:00 o'clock through the 3:30 positions. You will see a slightly darker radial? surface which should match the reverse. Radiating pressure from reverse die mitigates most of the pressure of the obverse die, but not quite all. In any case, a check of the edge should reveal a slight, perceptible bend in the area. This is only my opinion. PS. I hate to be a stickler, oh, never mind.
If you can post two in focus photos like this, it may show that your coin has, what may be a Blakesley Effect.
Not a huge error. Your new photos helped some. I Would say that your coin was Struck on a Damaged Planchet due to the BE rim weakness between 7 & 8 o'clock on the obverse, and at E of EPU on the reverse. This would indicate that the planchet was damaged before it went through the Upset Mill. (Damage of an undetermined cause.) A Clipped planchet is considered one of the Minor or Common Error. This coin should be considered the same. IMO