Wildly ambitious.
Yes, but you beat me to it. The only 1982 brass cent "worth a bunch" is the 1982 D small date. The other 1982 brass and zinc cents are all common.
For low income newbies just starting out, yes most definitely. Because all they really have for the option of supply is the coins that pass...
When you "refuse to lose" you often do in the end.
Yes I've seen things like those for years.
That works!
They also are not proofs, so what you have a decent business strikes. But at least they are silver.
Or somewhat atypical weakness caused by the fact those letters are opposite the base of Lincolns bust nad it is a lot easier for the metal to flow...
That would be collecting die STATES, since the die is a little more worn after each coin is struck. Each coin is actually from a different die...
We we are all entitled to our opinions. So send it off to the TPG gods and get your new discovery announced to the numismatic world.
Or a strong die clash. No way to tell if it is a die clash or PFDT without good images.
Right he is just supplying the people that will try to pass it off them off as real. The several years later the adhesive dries out, the note...
Took me a minute to get that.
Me too, only without the allowance which made it a lot tougher.
More than likely if you bought it the Walton holder would probaly come along with it (I hope so) so you could crack it out ond put it back in....
I think a lot of new people were brought in by the state quarter program but when they finished that and then found that pretty much every thing...
Yes, numismatists and museums, both of which tend to be chronically short on funds and storage space. As Baseball said the Smithsonian, and most...
A reoccurring thing, we officially went metric in 1866 but never enforced a changeover.
Kurt is right, those are reprocessed.
Since anvil dies are enclosed by the collar they probably have a lower incidence of rim cuds than hammer dies which have the possibility of damage...
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