I have no doubt this is a proper grade. Nickels are difficult, and there were very few flaws on that coin. I'd have gone 67 (I didn't see the...
I don't see why these were saved. Always show the reverse. All spenders.
Looks like a dryer coin. Worthless. It's not 1943 as the 3 hangs down very low on that date. And your date even though circulated you can see they...
While I also believe the foreign material on the reverse of the coin became attached after the minting process. There does appear to be something...
Difficult because of the light/shading. I can't see a lot of the coin. PF 66 until better photos.
The 1982 Philly small date copper/ small date zinc has value, ONLY in the highest grades (mint state). And that is true for most non rare coins....
As for the OP, I don't think you overpaid, while personally I am in the $90 area on this coin. (If it is straight grades.) A good point was made...
2 areas of damage on the reverse off 9 o'clock. VF-details grade. 25 cents.
Agree on the proof. PF 65
It is a 1982-D small date. However it is damaged due to zinc rot. 1 cent. Despite the ultra rare 1982-D copper small date, 2 known, the better...
I have one in pretty good condition. It's a good date compared to most of them. While not a key date or a semi key, there are other dates that...
That's very interesting about the weight tolerance. Why does a MUCH heavier coin have such a low tolerance, 0.097 grams, and the tolerance on a...
This is a Philly coin with verdigris. 1 cent as I already posted. Damaged coins get a "details" grade.
Title says 1982 small date 3.1 grams. Value 1 cent. Photos show 1962-D value 1 cent.
I also think it's a proof. Difficult to have a business strike 1881 in this condition, that would be remarkable. PF-66
Nickel plated?
If it is a real bill someone just rubber stamped some characters on it. If it is a fake bill, I seriously doubt that it wasn't recognized at the...
If you compare it to the size of a real bill it should be noticeably smaller.
In regards to the 1971-D. There's nothing to mistake, as Denver never made proof coins.
Tolerance of ± 0.227 grams. 5.443-5.897.
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