these strong die clash coins are scarce and hard to find . I have a counter clashed jefferson nickel and have looked for a long time and never...
jbird01 these coins definitely came from the same set of dies obverse and reverse. if you have a few you probably know how scarce the peeing bison...
no if it was a error it would be a dropped letter coin and the T would be sunken in.
This sounds like a lot of ebay listings I have seen
I have heard of different metals being experimented with in 1982 for the cent coins. get a error expert to examine this one and then everyone can...
definitely pmd , the coin has been damaged after leaving the mint
That 45 D cent may be struck on a foreign planchet. It sure looks good to me.
Like someone else already mentioned in this thread this coin was mostlikely a encased coin from a piece of jewelry. It definitely is not a mint...
It's a parking lot coin and has been run over by vehicles
most definitely PMD , it would be impossible for this dime to have come from the mint like this. a dime coin die is too big to strike something...
this one is easy to see what did this. the coins are called struck thru coins like rickmp said in post number 5. a piece of foreign material got...
the lab told you wrong , this is glue . I have seen this hundreds of times on coins I find and coins on this forum with the glue on them. some...
It's a rotted cent like I said in post #4 our cent coins after 1982 are just junk IMO . a rotted one like this will not go thru a counting...
I agree with the others that said glue , this is definitely glue on your coin. some types of glue will not come off easily even with acetone....
this looks like a rotted zinc cent because it is larger in diameter than normal.. the zinc swells up and rots and turns into dust , this leaves...
Someone thought they were scamming someone else and got scammed .. LOL
I hate to say it but I agree with dt menace , it's just the usual plating blisters from where the zinc core is starting to rot
It don't look like a 95 doubled die to me
ok then maybe it is one of the common struck thru grease coins. the mint workers sometimes use too much grease on the dies then dust and all kinds...
It's hard to see everything from just looking at photos. from what you are saying it sounds like some type of glue or other dried residue may have...
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