Texas Nickel. There's a point to the diameter - saving 20 cents in a vending machine. :)
Probably not. Any of the auction houses reach an audience orders of magnitude larger than any online community.
Well, it's close enough to figure it for a normal planchet, eliminating some niche possibilities.
I've not a clue why you're getting hammered on this, Chris. Yes, I think you're wrong sometimes but this ain't one of those times. :) In WWI, the...
3.11 grams.
No, because the trolls will dump on it every_time.
Nor does it explain how, unlike machine doubling, the "second" D is thicker than the first. I think it's a partial fill from something relatively...
You can't expect anything less around here.
You apparently don't support correct definitions, either.
You're saying this even though we've already identified the variety from the die crack. :)
It isn't about seeing the error. You can do that with a $5 loupe. Studying it, though, is a different story, and that requires good optics at...
Yes.
Well, the authorities in the Morgan world told them the Micro O's were legitimate, and they're pretty good copies right down to the composition.
Good Golly, that's enough for a full-on photo rig. Well, you still have to supply a camera. Quality optics aren't cheap.
I don't really know. They come to market in condition this worn so infrequently that the most recent sales I can find went for less than the...
You have been extraordinarily lucky with your Morgans if you only find one in 50 to show die cracks. :)
Images are too pixelated for any opinion.
Keep in mind, these seem to be scans and not pics, so you can't tell what the surfaces actually look like.
Good point. I'm having a bit of time fitting the color progression on the coin into what's known (we know precisely the hue progression of NT...
Photoshop. PCGS did_not put those numbers there. For all their errors, I don't believe I've ever heard of a duplicate number in a PCGS slab, and...
Separate names with a comma.