This coin appears to have fairly severe surface damage. Perhaps it spent a few decades in salt water before being found.
Cuds are usually not flat like the anomaly on your coin. It looks to me like something flattened your coin in two places.
One word - EDUCATION.
We can see the rims in the obverse and reverse photos. The last photos are of the edge. Looks like PMD all the way to me.
But the fact remains that there is a right way and a wrong way to spell words. Different is usually wrong.
A nickel planchet would not fit inside a collar for dimes. As Matt points out it can only be a coin with a larger diameter. (That is why I said...
I think we can rule out a cent or a dime. Maybe he found a quarter struck on a nickel planchet. Inquiring minds want to know.
With single-squeeze hubbing it is highly unlikely this is a doubleD die with doubling this close to the rim.
Your words have been marked.
It sounds like you may be working under the false assumption that a 90% Silver Half Dollar contains a half-ounce of silver. A 90% Silver Half...
I agree. Looks like a very nice coin.
I would suggest that you shoot the coin straight on rather than at a steep angle. That way you can get the entire coin in focus.
I will make it unanimous - it is a dryer coin. No value above face.
Apparently nothing has changed in the six weeks that I have been away.
When someone refers to a 1984 coin as "older" I really feel old.
Ain't that the truth!!
Contemporary counterfeits are very collectible. I have a few myself (of various designs and denominations).
Wow! That's a game changer and will make criminals out of a lot of people.
You apparently missed my point, pal.
And some people probably can't understand why you would want to collect coins (assuming you collect coins).
Separate names with a comma.