Nice set! How long did it take you to put it all together?
It is there, it is just very faint. I can see it in the pictures. Most likely a grease filled die that produced a bad strike in that area.
Both A and B have PMD and years of wear.
No, they are die polish marks.
Yes, it should be backwards. and it should also be green! This was obviously made on a copying machine using black ink.
Check this supposed back to front offset printing error where the bck is printed in black and white. I wonder which printer he used....
Plenty of polish lines where they tried to obliterate the clash mark(s).
What is that supposed to mean?
Too soon.
Could it be a dropped "O" from ONE?
Please consider adding some punctuation to your posts. They are very hard to read and give me a head ache.
Too rich for my blood.
If the letters are incuse the hit would not affect them.
I suggest you search for capped die on the internet. You will see many examples.
Looks like it took a hit. I believe it is PMD (post mint damage). Just my opinion from the photos.
I don't know. It just looks to soft and mushy to be damage or plain old wear. I don't think the mint would have let these dies get into this...
Might this be a test strike? These usually strike up very well.
What was it that made you think it was a "struck through"? Was it the mark between the two planes?
What is it about the coin that made you think it was a capped die?
Circulation may have reduced its weight. The Henning nickel for 1944 has three variations: 1. No mint mark without the looped "R" 2. No mint...
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