It is hard to imagine anyone paying more than face value for them as is. I would look through them for anything good.
Value is in whatever nickels are in there. Open up and see what you've got.
Did you read this thread that you posted in? It explains everything.
Not an error, it is just damaged by heat.
Absolutely has some value. Clear pictures obverse and reverse are needed to be sure, but it looks like it might be worth a couple of dollars.
OK, pics are good enough. It is a normal Philadelphia dime that looks like it has been polished.
Sounds like a normal Philadelphia minted dime, but without pictures it is just a guess.
It's nice enough for it's age that I would keep it. Value would only be one cent though.
Agreed, not a mintmark. Just a normal beat up Philadelphia cent.
Both coins are just damaged, face value.
War nickels are cheap, pick up a couple and test them side by side with the one in question.
1942
Sorry to say they are just regular cents that have been damaged. Either by heat or placing the coin between two pieces of a softer material and...
Spacing is off, if the left mark is the original location, then it is too far from the 4.
I think it is a 44 that someone was turning into a 14 D.
Agreed, normal cent that has been plated.
Sounds like someone stamped it with a letter J punch. Is the letter indented or raised?
Sorry to say your coin just has glue or something similar on it and a dime was pressed into it. Not an error of any kind. It is surprising how...
Unlikely, only two have been found to date. If you have 6 it would be the find of a lifetime! Please post some pictures, I hope I am wrong!
Damage doesn't increase the value. It is just worth a cent, but in that condition it may not even be accepted.
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