Possible shield nickel on wrong planchet? Weighs 3.63 grams

Discussion in 'Error Coins' started by Bryanford777, May 19, 2020.

  1. Bryanford777

    Bryanford777 Member

    1CCEBB79-7026-4A8B-A22E-7E71AF7B296D.jpeg B29442B0-26C0-4E44-A70B-C5FEA5192C6E.jpeg 4F560472-0808-4232-BCDA-8871C060D981.jpeg 705F1F02-C670-42B8-AA69-20AA133AD1BF.jpeg 5FB8424D-E76D-44F3-AE4B-1454F697E29B.jpeg 3D0FA40C-76BA-4A8C-AE9E-1A9B31C6390C.jpeg 8B03983C-7C17-4D32-9635-DB97906AE493.jpeg So I found this in my book I purchased awhile ago for 10$ . I finally was looking at it out of the 2x2 and it weighs a lot less then a regular well worn shield nickel. ( my brand new scale is off .03 roughly) and the coin is a lot thinner and slightly smaller in diameter.
    I just got into coins a year ago. So maybe I’m missing something. The coin is worn down on the outside a lot but the center is decent . Should I bring to a local coin store and have them put on the machine that tells what materials it is ? Or something I should send in to get graded and see what they think ?
     
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  3. -jeffB

    -jeffB Greshams LEO Supporter

    The reverse looks like it was eaten away by acid. If it were worn down to start, then plopped onto something corrosive, this is what I'd expect to see. And I'd expect it to be drastically underweight as well.
     
    rascal likes this.
  4. YoloBagels

    YoloBagels Well-Known Member

    Shield cents are not my thing by any means but considering the grainyness/corrosion(?) on the coin and strange weight, I suspect it to be a possible counterfeit; perhaps contemporary. Lettering looks different as well, though I am unsure about die varieties on shield nicks.

    Then again there is a fat chance that it's not a counterfeit and just damaged, my guess if so would be saltwater damage. Hopefully someone more enlightened on this topic can provide better insight. Thanks for sharing.
     
  5. paddyman98

    paddyman98 I'm a professional expert in specializing! Supporter

    No

    No
     
  6. Treashunt

    Treashunt The Other Frank

    simple:
    post mint damage
     
  7. Fred Weinberg

    Fred Weinberg Well-Known Member

    Badly Corroded surfaces,which accounts for the weight.
     
    rascal likes this.
  8. Collecting Nut

    Collecting Nut Borderline Hoarder

    It's damaged. You over paid for that coin.
     
    rascal likes this.
  9. Bryanford777

    Bryanford777 Member

    I just got into coins last year and this tends to be a common occurrence lol

    thank you to everyone who replied. I was. Kinda doubting it was on a different planchet because the weight wasn’t the same as a dime etc .
     
  10. Pickin and Grinin

    Pickin and Grinin Well-Known Member

    Any time you have a question dont be afraid to ask.
     
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