grease strike through
Struck on 1 cent stock - not a cent-sized planchet - but the right size planchet for a dime, just cut from zinc cent stock. That is, if the label...
@Puddin'Farts 1964 is a banner year for fake die strikes on nickels. Here is mine, and there are several others. I open to the possibility it...
sometimes the coin's environment can cause the bad mixture to start delaminating after it left the Mint. I know people who put coins in a freezer...
some errors can happen after the coin leaves the mint, including laminations
Sure. 1. For starters the denticles look nothing like how they should. 2. The feathers are not very defined for what is a Mint State coin. 3....
I bought this knowing it was a fake. Neither the planchet nor the die strike is real.
Not sure yet. Cant scan until coin shops can reopen
Watcha think? [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
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Yes. Missing the layer means it is thinner. The dies are calibrated to strike a certain thickness, and if it is thinner some areas won't be as...
100% not a split planchet, wrong stock, or a thin planchet error. I agree it is chemical and corrosive damaged that affected the weight.
I would consider myself lucky if some store accepted it as a quarter.
Actually it could be both. Lamination errors can also develop after they were shipped out of the Mint. So it very well could be a post-Mint...
I need better closeups to tell. part of it looks recessed into the coin on my end as if it were a minor strike-through a small fragment.
Please reread my post, and for God's sake, calm the hell down
Yup. Another total jerk
though they were counterfeit, was the metallic content correct or did they plate lead coins with gold, for example?
LOVE IT
Looking to buy some of these, prefer certified but willing to look at raw examples. edited Thanks!
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