Agreed, normal.
I am just seeing a well circulated wheat cent. Kentucky's 3 cent value is about right.
Well, it is a Philadelphia minted Buffalo nickel made from 1913 to 1938. The dates tended to wear off, especially on the earlier coins.
That is one badly damaged nickel.
If there is no mint mark then it is from the Philadelphia mint.
A copy steel cent would most likely cost more than a genuine one!
Can't really help you, I don't see anything out of the ordinary. Ask all the questions you want, that is one of the main purposes of the forum!...
Yes, it is a fake.
There were pictures in another thread but it appears to be gone. It did not appear to be a wide AM to me.
The token can't be a genuine 1824, Jackson wasn't even elected president until 1828 and his battle with the bank came much later.
Yup, spend it.
Looks like it was harshly cleaned as well, that would hurt the value.
No, definitely not.
Small or large doesn't apply to 1986.
Just a normal cent that has been cleaned, no need to go any further.
It is unlikely that any in the roll would be worth getting graded, but separate pictures of each individual coin would be needed for anyone to...
I don't see any doubled die, there are some plating issues. Just worth a cent I would say.
It's glue or some similar substance.
Is that Confederate currency? If so can you post pictures, never seems to be enough posted on here!
It is a "vise job" a nickel and dime were squeezed together impressing the dime image on the nickel. This is just considered post mint damage.
Separate names with a comma.