Absolutely they should eliminate the cent. I like the idea of a bi-metallic circulating coin, one worth $2.50 and another equaling $5. But they...
AU58. Pretty color!
Keep an eye open-there's some beautifully toned Jeff proofs out there, especially 1961 thru 1963. Here's a beauty from 1958- [ATTACH]
There's no way I could ever afford my complete set of Buff proofs without cherrypicking these and buying the rest using profits from other...
[ATTACH] 1936 satin proof. Cherrypicked for $12 as a business strike. PCGS PR66.
[ATTACH] 1915 matte proof. Cherrypicked for $125 as a business strike. PCGS PR64.
[ATTACH] My 1916 matte proof. Cherrypicked for $100 as a business strike. PCGS PR65.
That is a Brazilian 10 centavos coin. The entire current series has extreme doubled die on most of the denominations.
Yep-there's many foreign doubled dies that blows the best the US has out of the water! Quality control is sorely lacking in the countries that...
And a nice foreign example. [ATTACH][ATTACH][ATTACH]
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It's a die clash. You'll see much more prominent ones on many dates depending on the degree of die rotation that exists when the die clash occurs....
Pretty coin. MS64.
Treashunt, you beat me to the punch. The correct term is "doubleD," not "double." As in doubled die. Nearly all coins are double dies, since they...
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Here's a couple of better images, from the "Varietyvista" website- [IMG] [IMG]
There's a bunch of them. The silver ones are prohibitively expensive. I think there may be a few gold ones, too.
Cherried as a business strike for $100; now in a PCGS PR65 slab
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