I have been wanting one of those since you first posted yours. I just don't think my pockets are deep enough.
Go do some reading, educate yourself.
You want some education, well you just asked for it whether you want it or not. Give a crap about what you are posting and you will get more help...
Great finds, I am still looking for one in the wild. Technically the price is a cherry pick!
Yours would be considered a BN if graded. some "Woodies" can be very colorful. Here is a RB. [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
T[ATTACH]Tell me that yours looks anything like this? [ATTACH]
Even though your coin has a clash, it does not make it a DDO. Every bit of the doubling also has to match. Quite playing games and actually try,...
See the tootsie roll effect on the date? The uneven dimensions of each digit? Add in the extra thickness. Most folks will look for notching or...
The doubling is evident on all the devices on the reverse. Even Lincoln sits way taller than usual. This is what is called class IV doubling,...
Thaler is attractive but not quite a monster. These often tone up on both sides with an extreme amount of colors. 4.9 Putting @ryang74 80S into...
Awesome. Is it raw?
Were these proofs that are excessively hair lined always straight graded? Or did they originally get a details grade by early ANA standards?
My favorite has to be this 83 Lincoln FS-801. An extremely hard example to find raw. And I expect it to stay this way for many years to come....
Lets try this. I am not very helpful when it comes to single squeeze hubbing. You can try sending it to Brians variety's...
TDR is short for triple die reverse. Quadruple die reverse We get these folks all the time that are greener that a four leaf clover. They refuse...
This is not a dot cent. You have done your best to over pixelate the photos, photo at different angles, even add arrows. The dot is just not...
Coins are struck, not stamped. It looks like a well worn quarter with circulation damage.
How about a clear photo of Liberty. It's interesting, but it is hard to rule out early stages of die deterioration with out seeing it in hand.
Buffalo nickels aren't clad they are made from a .750 copper and .250 nickel. So it is impossible to be missing a clad layer. Think ground level...
Copper is a soft metal, and very malleable. ]A letter or number can easily be moved on the coins surface.
Separate names with a comma.