That's machine doubling and very common. You are looking for Die doubling not a doubling that happens during the striking process....
Walter if the coin had even a minute numismatic value. It was lost when the Kennedy counterstamp was added to it.
For sure! Put it on ebay and make sure you put " Rare" in the title, or else it won't sell. :hilarious:
Still trying to figure the no date part?
Even with the over saturation, I would have to say AT/QC.
[IMG]
As far as I now Red is designated for coins that have zero distracting carbon spots. The red can change tones, even light pastels, but if they are...
This is merely an acceptance problem. @gianni There is no way of turning your brown cents into Red ones.
I had to watch it Hillarious!
I believe you answered your self in the last paragraph of your statement, and that is cents weighing 2.5 are Zinc.
Might even need to be "featured" for a while. It rarely gets used correctly.o_O
Here is a 46' in RB. [ATTACH] [ATTACH] The reason it isn't Red is because of the carbon spots on the reverse. This shouldn't be difficult.
The clash also looks visible between the back legs, and possibly part of the hair at the S. Nice example!
See how the doubling is surrounding the devices. Easily seen in WE. This is die deterioration doubling, or DDD. By the way much better photos...
Some can be accidental if caught in a rotating machine, but most are because someone had too much time on their hands.
A quarter.
I can't vote None apply
There is to much reflection shown in the photos to tell anything. I can't find any descriptors to tell what I am looking at. My best guess is die...
It looks like an 80P to me. https://www.ngccoin.com/coin-explorer/jefferson-five-cents-pscid-25/1980-p-5c-ms-coinid-14104
Gotcha I was looking at this medal, But I see that it was made in bronze also but with a different portrait obv....
Separate names with a comma.