$1.00, mid 1800's and it's crisp. No stains, no folds, no dates and no signatures. Florida [ATTACH] [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
AD 40-60 Obv. OEON POMHN; Roma Bust with mural crown right Rev. OEON CYNKAHTON; Laureate Bust of Senate right [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
At an auction
It's late and I'm tired so I can't see straight. It is a form of the dreaded NAV or no added value doubling.
I've never had any problems and I've gotten some great coins. As I remember every coin was in a slab but that was what I was buying at the time.
The Die filled with grease and the last digit is very weak. Neat but common.
If it looks flat and shelf like it's MD. Welcome to CT.
One day sooner rather than later it will happen and once you're a grandfather there's no going back.
Ask yourself how could this occur in the minting process? The answer is simple, it can't. Your Cent is on Zinc with a thin copper coating. And...
Time for your lesson: He's a teenager and he's single. I have grandkids and happily married. It was a joke which I think blew past you. Lol
That's a great error!
Normal and welcome to CT.
Nice find. It pays to double check.
Damaged, you can see the pushed up metal.
That's a sweet looking coin. Looks like it was just minted yesterday.
Clashes can be difficult. Some are easy and others are tough. The easiest way is to remember a clash is the reverse side of the coin. If your...
Looks like a worn die caused that.
NAV is not any kind of doubling. It is a category that encompasses all types of doubling that add no value. Like, MD, DDD, ejection doubling, and...
Ancient coin [ATTACH]
Over 60 years of circulation damage. That's how it happened.
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