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Book value for a 1964 cent proof may be as much as $1.50, but there's really no market for this. It's just a keeper.
When they say cents are "red" they aren't actually red but appear to be brand spanking new. (Mint state) Cents that actually have a red clay...
As for the small merchant not being able to accept BC, there was a post here about a person who was at a coin show and one of the vendors accepted...
Not worth sending them in, as it costs too much and there is no debate about what the errors are. The second one will weigh 2.5 grams if zinc and...
Both large. The copper value has been explained in other threads why it is less than the weight/ spot copper. 1/2 cent each. Worth more as a face...
I don't know what else the 6 could be. Maybe it took a hit. If the obverse didn't have the scratch, and there seems to be some verdigris on the...
Yes I didn't know if the carbon spots on the reverse of this 1946 were indeed carbon spots, or something else, that's why the parentheses....
Great mintage 5,000. I assume the commems have a high survival rate, because they were meant to be collected and saved. Except for a few that went...
Nice atheist coin.
If the edges are blurry, take 3 photos so that the left and right edge are towards the center in both photos, and then of course the straight on...
OK I thought it was gremlins. Don't feed them after midnight. No matter what time it is, it is ALWAYS after midnight.
It's a nice 1946. I do see doubling in the date, but IDK if it is DD doubling. How come on a lot of these nice coins, there are those "carbon"...
This fascination with minutiae is fascinating.
Some of the old Indians are cupro nickel and have a natural grayish color.
I got a plated one recently. At least it wasn't a small date, that would have been brutal. [ATTACH]
Oh I thought the photo was good. Nice and clear and large. Good for observation.
I wasn't trying to discourage you. I just wasn't sure what you were asking about the coin. I didn't see anything out of the ordinary. But I didn't...
The 2 on the dime is faint. But struck through grease usually has complete letters or numbers entirely missing. Not sure this is a struck through.
Does it appear to the naked eye to be plated, (like a silver color) and not a copper color? If so, it's just a keeper with no real value.
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