false and fake are synonyms. And ANYTHING used outside the Mint to strike an image/design/lettering/mintmarks on a coin or planchet is considered...
this one isn't genuine either [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
Struck with fake dies. It is worth 1 cent.
No idea unfortunately. I don't study currency...yet...
No, not exactly
And photos with out a clear shot
Nice find on that curbed clip. Definitely genuine
Matching up a curved clip to a normal coin doesn't prove anything in terms of identifying a curved clip as genuine. I own many curved clips that...
Dare I ask what happened to him?
A coin die along the outer edge has an incused/recessed circular ring called a 'gutter.' It's job is to sharpen the rim upon striking.
The recessed rim gutter of the other set of dies can also provide a quasi-rim
Simple. A dime planchet (raised rims) is struck by quarter dies. The rims don't disappear they just flatten a bit sometimes, but not completely...
Coins struck on smaller planchets can still have raised rims.
Dime stock is not the same as a dime planchet.
Very neat
Acid damage. 100% Accept it or continue to cling to bad information and keep making the same mistakes and wasting money. If you know so much,...
10-4 to that!
Unfortunately steel cent planchets are garbage. Almost every other denomination struck on a steel cent has some type of damage
What you did prove is you don't know the minting process for coins. If you did, this would be an easy call that takes 1 second to know why it...
Former law enforcement here as well (U.S. Customs/Treasury Dep't.) Also, the burden is on YOU to prove why IT IS. The burden IS NOT placed on...
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