Yep, machine doubling. Very common on cents 1968-1972. Keep up the hunt!
Question...what makes you think it is die abrasion doubling? I do not see any die scratches around the date, and the anomaly looks very similar to...
Yes, it can be time consuming to try to find which die you have, but the great thing about variety collecting is you technically never lose money....
Looks like split-plate doubling in my honest opinion. Whenever there is near-identical doubling on both the date and mintmark, it is almost never...
A way to determine this is by looking for the "blakesley effect". Essentially, in a coin with a true clip, the rim directly opposite of the clip...
Machine doubling is very common on coins dated 1968-1972. Keep up the hunt!
Die abrasion doubling. Sometimes when the dies clash, mint employees abrade the dies to remove the clash marks, and it can have weird effects on...
Looks like a "woodie", essentially alloy impurities in the coin. Keep up the hunt!
Hi all, Doing yet another die variety for the day. This one is listed as 2006P-1DO-021 on coppercoins.com. It is a class IX doubled die that...
Oh, I missed the link somehow. Didn't know that it was slabbed. Not sure what to say now, but I wouldn't pay that much for it personally...
Drool....
Just checked my cherrypicker's guide as well, and indeed this coin does look like the OMM listed. Nice find!
I know I commented on it on the LCR, but cool find Dave!
Instead of linking it, maybe download the image to your computer and then upload it to this thread.
I see the anomaly in question, and it looks like a possible extra finger. I'm just not 100% sure it is.
That link does not work. Says something about the owner not having permission for something or other.
Unfortunately, I am not seeing anything that indicates an OMM. Maybe something will be more apparent after the dirt is removed. Keep up the hunt!
It is a cool die crack, but honestly, I don't see anyone paying more than $10 for it IMO.
Have you tried checking coppercoins.com? You don't always need us in order to determine if it is a doubled die if you can match it yourself.
It looks like a bit of displaced metal.
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