Roosevelt Dime with portion 'Flaked off'?

Discussion in 'Error Coins' started by EagleEyed, Jul 8, 2005.

  1. EagleEyed

    EagleEyed New Member

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  3. mikediamond

    mikediamond Coin Collector

    It could be a natural "lamination flake". However, the detached piece seems to show an upturned edge and other signs of flexion. That suggests that this is a "clamshell split" that was bent back and forth until it broke off from metal fatigue. That would make this coin an "enhanced error" with little or no value.
     
  4. lawdogct

    lawdogct Coin Collector

    Melt value of the silver is about 40 - 50 cents last I knew.
     
  5. Pete P.

    Pete P. Senior Member

    Are silver dimes laminated?
     
  6. mikediamond

    mikediamond Coin Collector

    I don't understand your question. No coin is normally composed of laminated layers. However, any solid-alloy coin can split and flake along the horizontal plane when impurities are present. That's what hobbyists are referring to when they speak of "lamination errors", "lamination flakes", "lamination peels", and "lamination cracks". "Clamshell splits" are a manifestation of the same phenomenon.
     
  7. Pete P.

    Pete P. Senior Member

    The question was in regards to "lamination flake".
    I'm reading lamination as the clad layers :p My bad!
     
  8. mikediamond

    mikediamond Coin Collector

    Different terminology is used when discussing cladding defects.
     
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