I honestly don't know. In the first images, I thought these areas were on the surface of the coin, but if they are incuse I'm still thinking...
I see. Then it's not glue. Strike-through would be my guess.
In the first images, the anomaly to the right looked raised. Is it incuse?
It's resin or glue. Dip it in acetone and I bet the error disappears.
Weakness in this area was common on 1943 cents. Your coin appears to have been reprocessed which would destroy any numismatic value. If it's...
Clips of this nature even in unc condition rarely command more than a few bucks. Honestly, with all the circulation and damage, you might get a...
For everything. And yes, it will be quite the resource when he is finished. However, it's a monumental task and I'm sure it will be some time in...
The Blakesly Effect is not always present. While it's a good diagnostic when present, when absent you can look at the metal flow from the devices...
Wexler is working on getting images up for all of his listing, but yes, right now on his website all he has are the listing numbers without any...
Deterioration towards the rim is what we typically see on the Lincoln Cent series, but as foundinrolls pointed out, it can be quite different with...
It's hard to be 100% sure from the photos, but I see some minor doubling going on on IGWT. It's definitely not 001 though. Wexler lists 8...
There is no doubled die here. As foundinrolls said, this is classic die deterioration for the Washington Quarter series.
Nice find Rick.
It's common and within mint tolerances. Up until 1990 the mint marks were punched into the dies by hand, and therefore, the position merely had a...
Damage. Just a big gouge across the bust.
There could be a die crack there, but I've never seen a die crack quite like that, and it honestly looks more like some type of organic corrosion.
Yeah, it's a die chip. The bow-tie was a common area for this on wheats during the '50s.
I've noticed that for the past 2 or 3 weeks the links haven't been working even though they say the correct #.
I'm not seeing anything indicative of a doubled die. However, if you could tell us specifically where you are seeing doubling that would help....
It's damage and moved metal from the damage. If there's anything else there, it would simply be a die crack. Given the damage it's hard to tell...
Separate names with a comma.