They are both worth 1 cent. The large date is common, and they used copper for most of the year until switching to zinc late 1982. That green spot...
Neo is the The One.
I don't think putting it into rolls helps them. People have put one quarter glued to each end of a round metal bar, and pass it off as a roll of...
Too bad it's a D. Looks like a smallie.
Also the first thing that drew my eye was the die chip. Coin appears cleaned. If it's not cleaned, worth more than $5. (As much as $10. But def 8-9).
A diversified portfolio can be a hedge, so you wouldn't have to give up PM's completely. Stocks, bonds, PM's, real estate, and cash. As for: This...
They appear very grainy and mushy details. Not a bad job on artificial aging.
That's a bit high. $105 is fair. https://www.uscurrencyauctions.com/$100-us-currency-value-price-guide.htm
What does it weigh? Since the 1982-D small date copper is the "one".
The 69-S DD is very rare and very prominent doubling. [ATTACH]
Quick turn around is the best you can do on that note. Good job.
I'm not seeing anything special. The last 2 can go on the Almost thread.
Comparison photos, real one on top. The hair, the mouth, the eyes, the nose, the chin are all different. [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
Your Lincoln does not match an actual Lincoln.
Just compare your 2 to this: [ATTACH]
It says 100 billion English pounds of gold. So you need different calculations as the pound is worth $1.30 So that would be 130,000,000,000 in US...
The Double Blakesley. A rare bird.
I am now seeing Roosevelts face on the second cent photo. The image does not look reversed, it is good. I was going off the 1st photo before,...
If the OP coin had a complete clad layer (post strike) and the lamination either detached post strike or was physically taken off post strike, I...
I like the small heads, and it could go for $105 in 10 years. (I don't know about today, face value to me.) The problem is, $100 is still an...
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