Yup, gold plated. Worth five cents.
It'd be worth five cents. Without a photo, we can't tell you much. I'm guessing it's plated, and plating is damage.
Can you crop out that creepy neon green carpet? We'd like to see the coin, not the carpet. Thanks.
Beaten to death. BTD
Nice, but nickels are not clad.
But he saw it on Youtube.
Jeremy, your cent shows luster in the obverse field. If it were a proof, it wouldn't show luster, but it would show a mirror like finish.
Shiny does not automatically equal proof. Take some time to learn how coins are struck, and the differences between proof strikes and business...
Yes, I'm sure. The edges are rounded and not squared and the fields are not mirror like. Here is a pic of a 1990 No S cent: [IMG] [IMG] From...
It would help your photos greatly if you would put them on a hard surface instead of in your hand. It will make them much easier to focus. You...
Lousy pics, but I can still tell that it's not a 'no S' proof, but is actually a Philadelphia business strike.
Are you asking if they have value? No, they have no value.
Great Britain Pennies. Queen Victoria and King George the Fifth. That's all I have.
All Post Mint Damage is bad.
The 85-D has coin counter or wrapping roller damage.
With billions of them having been minted, and the fact that they are copper plated zinc, I can only guess that they will all have rotted away...
I'd have more to add if I could see the entire coin.
True, but it's not the first time you've been told.
Can you please post photos of the ENTIRE coin and not just small portions of it?
At that time, mint marks were punched into the dies by hand. Many more than one die were used to strike the coins. Because it was punched by hand,...
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