contact Dan Malone (He runs CoinHelpU) at Portsmouth Coin & Currency in Ohio. He has some, but I sold out of my stash
Meanwhile... Here's to all my CoinTalk bros...amd gals....Cheers! [ATTACH]
Enjoy! 1. One of my books had all upside-down pages after the "Legal" page... [ATTACH] 2. An off-center print job on a U.S. Mint bag [ATTACH]...
Your knockouts are not mint-made blanks. I highly recommend you don't waste your money whereby they will charge you for info that was given free...
They have various sizes. Some are even quarter sized
@justyn p
Here is something I made to help new collectors who think they found a very scarce unstruck 1943 Lincoln Cent. I attached a link to the PDF which...
If any part of the rim is sharp and defined on this coin, then it had to have received a normal strike., so a "weak strike" is out. Therefore it...
The wire rim on the obverse side leads me to believe it is geniine
rubber bands can do that to silver
That Jefferson. That is a BEEEEA-U-TY
Honestly, I try to be patient...but Dear Lord, why....WHY...would someone think this coin is an error?
Holy Grail for me would be a non-gold coin struck on gold stock. There are a few Lincoln cents, indian head cents and a damaged buffalo nickel.
I agree with @Fred Weinberg The spacing between the obverse markings matches the distance between the "pseudo-perforations" of the sealer...
I honestly don't know what that is. To me, it is a form of die damage. Very similar in appearance to a ridge ring...hmm...
Both are altered
Don't forget this one! [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
I don't see die deterioration here, or worn dies, or a strike-through. Just a very circulated dime.
agreee 100%
I agree 100% with @Fred Weinberg
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