Yes it's doubling but it's worthless doubling. It's flat and shelf like and that is MD.
A die chip, a die crack or a strike through but you're not going to retire on any of those.
Agree with a lamination error but only worth face value.
Welcome to CT. They are nice but each is worth face value. Also, while nice and definitely hole fillers, neither of them should be considered red.
Please have this thread moved to the Ancients forum. Those people are very knowledgeable.
And in a few more days it will be 2020. Welcome to CT.
That quarter has been plated. It's not silver. It's worth a quarter.
In the fifth post, you have a photo showing the roll was cut.
Best to start a new thread and not hi jack one. You'll get more answers.
Welcome to CT. Did you notice the minor rim dings?
I can't say about the grading of silver to gold. It is what it is and we are not going to change that from the graders.
You cut the roll open. Ouch! I would have let them be.
Color is not how you tell. Coins are metal and metal tones so color is out. It looks normal to me.
The more you increase your magnifying the more anomalies you'll find. Anything over 10x is ridiculous as every coin would be an error. You have a...
NAV Doubling
It's zinc so no annealing process is involved.
It's NAV Doubling
I'm not seeing anything unusual but if that coin has everything you state about it, it's still worth a nickel as everything you state is common.
Welcome to CT. Something just doesn't look right to me.
It's damaged. Does it matter how?
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