Some of them end with ...:)
That's for advertising and it's a large part of what pays your free membership. If you don't want to see the ads become a supporter. And there is...
Just s greaser and a lot of circulation wear and tear. It's a spender.
Yes, I believe it would. Must be some out there somewhere.
The copper plating has. Even removed. A fairly simple process as we see lots of them.
You're welcome. The folds are bad enough but the staining does it for me.
It's not a BIE error. It may be a die chip but it's not a BIE. A BIE is a die chip between the BE in LIBERTY.
The 1948 has a lamination error but all of the other coins are damaged.
I would place my value on the lower end as the bill has multiple folds. Both sides display stains and discoloration. In fact, I'd pass on this...
I couldn't look at his entire web site. I just couldn't do it. Tommy, you've done what you can and should do no more.
No, not a Doubled Die anything.
I read that and dismissed it as I couldn't make sense of it. Nice call.
A 1944 steel cent is worth big bucks but a 1944 converted to a 1943? What's the value in that? When I try to enlarge on my cell phone it gets too...
It's a great example of NAV, No Added Value Doubling.
The coin is damaged and worth face value. It takes a long time to learn so stick with it. It's the only way.
Then I would say the first coin is a die chip but the second coin is a die crack. Neither one is worth a lot but both are nice worthy of keeping....
Welcome to CT. I would leave it in the packaging, at least to see if anyone can identify it. If no one can you can always remove it later.
It pays to check and keep up to date with these sites, especially if you plan on using them.
X2 to what Paddy said.
Same date? Same mintmark?
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