They are from a single die, not a master hub. The one pictured is not a doubled die.
The proper terminology is doubleD die, with a "D" at the end. Double die means two dies.
Mint mark position is wrong.
There are some outstanding doubled dies in this series that could double the value of the set. Go here-http://varietyvista.com/index.htm-to see...
The 1929-S 2 feather is a well known date and yours seems to be a 2 feather, as does the 1921. The 1921 is not too scarce-it and the 1916 and...
I found one around 25 years ago in the Northeastern Ohio area. It was a low end Mint state from an early state of the die.
Classic machine doubling-not a doubled die.
As has been stated-RPM #1.
Looks like the tripled die, FS-103 to me. In that condition it wouldn't be worth much more than melt. Go to this...
Looks NT to me. I would not dip it. If you like it that's all that really counts.
That's a very nice clash. One that strong should be worth a little extra. If you request it I'm sure it would be designated as a die clash. Due to...
There are three doubled die obverses known for the 1970-D quarter. They are shown here-...
It's machine doubling. Use this website--http://varietyvista.com/index.htm--to verify all modern doubled dies
I misplaced a proof 1960 Lg/Sm date cent 20 years ago. I've never found it.
Photograde is outstanding although the grading standards therein are very conservative these days.
The 1867 is a repunched date while the 1887 is an actual overdate. That makes all the difference. I cherried the 8/7 in Good around 20 years ago....
VarietyVista is a great site that I visit often. A worthwhile doubled die doesn't have to have a spread like the 1955/55. I don't bother with the...
Better than Need Glasses Charlie IMO.
AU50. Keep an eye out for the strong doubled die reverse that is found on about 10% of the variety. Value? I'd say $200-$250.
Not any of the three doubled dies known for the date/Mint.
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