Wow, really cool find.
I really hate it when I have a token that I can find no information on.:mad: I hope someone comes along with the answer because I am curious now.
You have given me something to ponder. Hmmmmmmm.....
It's not far enough off center to be classified off center.
That's a pretty old greaser, although I have seen older. It seems that older coins have less grease strike-throughs for some reason.
I see nothing wrong with the 1974 cent, and the 1986 cent does not have a weak strike, it is a grease strike-through, which is a fairly common error.
Wow, I wonder if they got that note when they found the Titanic in 1985 (wait, they didn't visit the wreck until 1986) or in about 2010?
Can you post pictures of it rinsed?
On the last page (weird stuff) you have 2 Missouri tax tokens and 2 planchets (the mint cuts out blanks that they stamp- so they are unstamped...
I think that there would be no silver dimes circulating in 250 years.
Great error, I think it would be worth more than 4-5 dollars if it is a wheat cent. Hard to tell, though.
Oh, and it wasn't from a feeder finger.
It could be an erreor, but it does not appear to have die chips or improper annealing.
Hmmm, I have a 1965 nickel that looks similar. Mine doesn't have a good strike, however. [ATTACH][ATTACH] P.S. It has a minor die clash. EDIT:...
Wow, looks nice.
Btw, I couldn't find that stacey person. From page 8. Lol.
Nice for change.
Can you take pictures of the individual coins? Maybe the dime??
Lol, I read the entire thread.
It would be interesting to see a heavy die transfer (or "ghosting"), or a die clash on a rotated die.
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