I think in that one, they just rolled the half dollar planchet/sheet a little thin.
Without showing the obverse, it could be a year where Wide AM is normal.
I agree on the intentional mischief. There's no way a Philly cent can accidentally host a Denver nickel. But, whoever tossed it in there, left it...
The spots I hit today have always been good. And it's the only part of the rotation where I never got a silver and/or a dollar coin. Got them on...
OK mine is the large note 1923 red ink US Note Speelman White, not the silver certificate.
Agree that the post mint damage is an 0 3.
Picture is blurry. If it is a doubled die, the damage on the obverse is a detriment.
And while technically what furryfrog says is true about damage and value, I think these are selling for .50 and .75 cents. So more than face...
Here you can see the two types of 2's which is the key: (I know a photo was posted before this) [ATTACH]
So they made clad and silver 40% proofs in 1976 quarters, halves, dollars. In each case the clad coins are rarer, but the silver have more value....
Good deal. What no poll? Is there any silver in the 1976 set?
Almost all large dates. In the second photo (Post #12, 3rd top row) That is a 1982-D small date, but probably (cough, cough) zinc. 2.5 grams. They...
It looks like it will hit $5,000 before going back to $10,000. It might NEVER go above $10,000 again. That is possible.
So hard to photograph. Looks MUCH better in hand. [ATTACH]
Love my gold plated South Dakota. Gonna take new pics. [ATTACH]
I have one of those (OP) a little better condition. I believe this is the funny back: [ATTACH]
^^^ I clicked Best Answer.
Seinfeld ELAINE: No, no . . . but it is quite a coincidence. RAVA: Yes, that's all, a coincidence! ELAINE: A big coincidence. RAVA: Not a big...
C. All of the above.
Can't tell what it is from the photo. They are usually 1920. Although, the 1920's D mints can be good coins, too bad this is destroyed.
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