I'm not seeing anything that would indicate a doubled die...sorry. Keep up the hunt!
Seems likely, I would also say struck-ghru grease.
The letters are definitely MD. Not sure about the doubling on the flower. It could be a doubled die, but then again I am only familiar with...
I can't really see anything out of the ordinary unfortunately...could you draw arrows on an application to point out the specific areas you are...
Looks like generally the same direction to me...that would fit with the MD hypothesis (or a doubled die if it was a class IV).
Laminations are generally minor errors and therefore not worth a significant premium.Keep up the hunt!
Cuds are die breaks that are connected to the rim. You do not have a cud. What you DO have is a plating blister near the date, which is common....
Yep, PMD all the way. Keep up the hunt!
Yep, that's the one! I do have to say that this is one of my all-time favorite RPMs. I am quite surprised it isn't in the CPG, it is quite a bold RPM.
Not much, but picked up a nice RPM in a trade today. :thumb:
Hi all, Time for DVOTD. This one comes courtesy of mike28. It is a triple repunched mintmark (one punch to the south, and one tilted). It is...
To each his own, Larry. :smile
I agree with RLM. Post-mint damage. Keep up the hunt!
I have to agree that both look like machine doubling. I know you mean machine doubling, but I personally try to stay away from saying "mdd",...
Perhaps you missed it, but at least the first one is actually an attributed variety. Granted, it is hard to see, but it is still there.
That is the point. A mule error is a coin with the obverse of obe design and the reverse of a different denomination.
+1 There are rim CUDs present, but the pictures are too far away to tell if there is an RPM present or not.
Looks like you've got them attributed correctly. Well done, and I am surprised to say I was wrong on #3! Unfortunately, their condition limits...
Second and four look like rotated/tilted RPMs. Try matching them up on coppercoins.com Third and fifth look like damage. Can't tell about the...
This is die deterioration doubling, which is caused by the overuse of dies. Not a true doubled die, sorry. Keep up the hunt!
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