All I see is minor doubling, either machine doubling or die deterioration doubling. There's no evidence of multiple strikes.
Looks real to me. The word IN shows metal flow and there is a Blakesley effect (weakness of the rim) at the opposite pole. Both are signs of...
You're confusing this fake with die clash. Die clash will show incuse, mirror-image reverse design elements on the obverse and incuse,...
Errors such as you describe are well-known but they have a totally different appearance. The introduction of a second coin into the striking...
It's not a mint error. These are commonly referred to as "hammer jobs", "vise jobs", "squeeze jobs", and "sandwich jobs". Your coin was...
If it is a split-before-strike planchet error, then it should be weakly struck and one face should show clear striations.
It might be worth a buck or two.
The crack is a lamination crack. I can't see the holes at the level of resolution provided by your photos.
Now you've got it! :)
No. Not a counterbrockage. Your coin was struck through a late-stage die cap. A raised ghost image bled through the thin metal of the cap from...
"Capped die strike" is quite a general term that encompasses a variety of errors. You can have a uniface die cap that from the get-go leaves no...
I see no indications that this is a double-strike. I don't see any doubling at all. Perhaps you're seeing machine doubling or die deterioration...
This is a very common site for machine doubling to appear on half dollars.
Coin metal conforms to the recesses of the die face. Both surfaces of a thin wafer of metal will conform to the nearest recess (in this case the...
Die chips. Very common on the wheat ears.
This is an authentic mint error. It's either a split-after-strike error or, more likely, a split-before-strike planchet that was struck beneath a...
Didn't you just sell it on eBay? That would tell you what it's worth. I'm not a coin dealer, so my grasp of wholesale and retail prices is...
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