If your coin was steel, it would have to be a left over steel planchet from 1943 that never got minted until 1957. It is possible. A cleaning crew...
A few more 9's after the 1st 3 and it would have value. I see the ragged scissor job now.
One of those markers: It contains an iodine solution that reacts with the starch in wood-based paper to create a black stain. When the solution is...
.01 cent. Plated coins are considered damage.
The plating can be super thin won't add much weight. As for the OP there are no silver pennies. In 1943 they made them out of steel (zinc coated)...
I don't think it's 2 bills if it was peeled apart and the reverse glued back on upside down. So it would weigh the same. 1 gram. I didn't think...
The reject bin is a better pull because sometimes it's silver.
People are not going to make something up for kicks. No one is trying to be mean, or trick you. You get the blunt truth here. It's up to you to...
There is a +/- tolerance level. Old coins that are worn are going to weigh a little less. The coin would have to be very light or very heavy for...
That one you can't tell because the letters have been mashed together. The 92 is the rarest one so probably not.
I was always able to replace coins for face value in a number of retail jobs I had. I think if the friends are aware that this is something he is...
While they may have come on the market in 2017, those coins (the mint worker) were found in 1943. And rare coins in the possession of a mint...
Dime on the grill. Severe Coin Star drought out here.
Yes this photo is clearer. I did see the snowman 8, but I couldn't tell about the 2.
Yes a few of them seem to be in good shape. $5 for the weak ones and $10 for the good ones.
Looks like a large date. I can't really tell from the photo. 82-D large or small there's no value. Philly small in zinc or copper in mint state,...
The LI in Liberty is my guess.
My brother in law opened for Bo in the 1990's at some gig in Colorado. [ATTACH]
Mechanical doubling, machine doubling, ejection doubling. I thought that they changed the process in the 1990's to cut down on the possibility of...
What Paddy said in post #6. To have a Wide AM over a Close AM would require 2 sets of dies to make that coin. I don't think that's possible. It...
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