I'm not sure if I get what you're saying. My understanding is that there was a design master hub, dateless, reduced from the galvano. This was...
Impossible to tell from that image, date position looks the same at least. Let us know when it arrives. Here's an MS65 with a great resolution...
https://www.ha.com/c/search/results.zx?term=lincoln+cent+struck+on+dime+planchet&si=2&archive_state=5327&sold_status=1526&mode=archive&page=204%7E1...
It's interesting how many crazy things went on with the Barber coins. I really enjoyed helping you research your discovery. Now if you really want...
Looking at Heritage archives it seems the 1943-S struck on dime planchet is more common than struck on bronze (but still rare). Perhaps the rarest...
That works with QR codes but not barcodes as far as I know. Older slabs don't have QR codes (some still don't).
Yes phone app, mine is called QR Reader and I think it popped up first in the App Store, been years since I installed it, free.
Not sure where or how I learned that. The digits before the dot is the PCGS #, in this case 6567, which takes you here...
You can bet with 255 million customer visits per week, they are not going to be rounding in your favor. That would cost them millions of dollars a...
.64 next to the cert# is the grade. Beauty!
I recently bought this one for $16 including BP and shipping, because of the wild obverse die clash. Price guide is $8 and whoever submitted it to...
@samclemens3991 The easiest way to ID Rev1 versus Rev2 dimes is to look at the strong central vein of the left-most leaf. For Rev1 (left, below)...
I've been meaning to do a detailed post about this for a long time so this was an opportunity. Once you digest the pickup points it's not...
It's "start a conversation" under a member's profile, which I have done. Look for the Inbox thing to indicate that you have a new conversation...
I'll just add that what I spewed is just the dimes. There is now a third obverse hub type used on 1900 quarters. There were two reverse hubs used...
Yes it was all published after 2015. PM me your email and I would be happy to send pdf's of some articles.
After spewing all the above, here is a list of the hub type transition varieties that are currently known. The least common ones are 1899-P Rev2,...
Here are full images highlighting the changed to both sides going from Obverse 1 to Obverse 2 in 1901, and from Reverse 1 to Reverse 2 in 1900....
What John McCloskey had discovered on the reverse was the addition of an extra fold to the right ribbon, and the two types have been called "thin...
I did submit a handful of Barber dime hub type transition varieties to Cherrypickers. Unfortunately after a lot of time and effort they decided...
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