Mechanical Doubling - very common on 64-D dimes and quarters, just the MM area.
Coin on the left looks like a uniface obverse Double Strike
Yes, I can. Your photos and observations are excellent examples of Numismatic Pareidolia. Hope that helps.
Numismatic Pareidolia
aka: Die Chip
My email is: Fred@FredWeinberg.com Contact me and we can talk about your errors.
Nice errors - I'd be an interested buyer (if I'm allowed to say that here)
No
Damaged No Blakesley Effect, No Metal Flow No cut & tear bands inside the 'clip' You can spend it.
The obv. looks 'funky', and the reverse definitely looks counterfeit.
I'm not saying I think it might be a 90% planchet. I seriously doubt that. However, if the OP wants to spend his money, I was just suggesting...
That's a GREAT DEEP ....... .....rim bump
Looks like a filled die, or more probably, a slightly weak strike. Notice the 'weak' area on the reverse is opposite the deepest portion of...
OP - here's a good tip - make sure you write on the submission flip (2.5 X2.5) that you believe it's 90% silver, not 40% - then PCGS will...
Two comments on this coin: 1. Great example of numismatic pareidolia 2. Welcome to my world -
Genuine
I mis-typed, of course. I should have written Conder101 !
I am the source for those dies; I bought 20,000 of them directly from the Denver Mint - And as colder 101 says above: The D means Denver, and...
That's all damage to the coin, after it was in circulation.
It's a gold plated novelty item. Hundreds of thousands of them have been gold plated over the decades. Not an error of any kind, I'm sorry to say.
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