Homeoparthic Coin Collecting. The more dilute (worn) it is, the more concentrated (expensive) it is.
Here's your Sin.
They look like original shotgun rolls, so I would say yes.
Keep it away from Red Copper.
It has a shot.
What does the edge look like, as well as the weight?
There were mint sets of 40% silver uncirculated Bicentennial Quarters, Halves & Dollars in addition to the proofs.
Just the operators.
Of course if they are P'ed on at least twice.
Correct, but I'll bet if you asked coin collectors what the most famous error coin is, those two would be mentioned more than half the time. Like...
I would love to pick up a '41 C/S half, but they don't come up for sale often.
I've only seen the Cleveland Half counerstamps of '41 & '71. Best coin club logo around and a beautiful medal I would love to have.
Go to San Francisco and you can see people P-ing on the street everywhere. Probably easier to get the job done there for folks living in the west.
Bullion, no. Coins, yes.
Someone that thinks of errors like I do. An error is something that shouldn't have been issued - unplated planchet, clipped planchet,...
Not an error coin? This is a great doubled-die piece, and one of the best errors of the State Quarters series. Didn't you see that Fred Weinberg...
If you don't like the opinions offered, I think you can find out for sure for <$100 (NGC/PCGS/ANACS).
"Choice" became MS-63; "Gem" was MS-65.
Yes, but it could also be machine doubling, aka ejection doubling. Minor doubling happens like that. Look at the 1934-D Peace Dollar, VAM 3 or 4...
Try looking for a slightly used machine that someone bought, then didn't catch the bug, or use it like they hoped. But only buy a good one -...
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