It's possible that this is one of the coins that Abe has heard about.
I finally got it to post a clearer picture of the words. [ATTACH]
This one was actually a copper-nickel counterfeit. But most were made out of lead.
[ATTACH]These pictures may be a little clearer.But not much.[ATTACH]
I hope you can tell from these terrible pictures. The paragraph below the picture gives an explanation of the coin.[ATTACH]
I can post the picture in the book this evening. It just looks like it was struck with very little pressure, That's why the right rear leg, and...
Ron Pope's book -"Buffalo Nickels - The Abraded Die Varieties" shows 2 different "Two Legged" varieties -the 1935 P, and a 1936 P mint. The 1936...
I agree with you. These coins wouldn't be special at all, if it wasn't for the 37 D 3 leg.- Which is wildly over popular. At any given time 24/7...
Would anybody agree that this is the same die pair that produced the 3 1/2 leg coin? But just an earlier die state coin? Ron Pope's book, (Buffalo...
The f under the date.
Wear never happens on the lowest points of a coin first. And if the leg were any weaker, this would be a true 3 legger. Also the green stuff came...
[ATTACH]This is about the rarest error coin I have right now. It was a cherry pick too. BTW the green stuff came right off, so picture it without...
jello - I'll probably have this coin graded since it is a 14/3, but if it was just a regular VF+ 1914 buffalo, I wouldn't dream of it. - And...
That's exactly right robbudo. It's like pulling up in a Corvette with the fender tore up. People don't say "Wow, nice Corvette", they say "What...
I was starting to wonder if anybody felt the same way. I think that in some cases, like when the lamination is missing, or is still there and...
In your opinion, does it hurt this coin? And if you get it slabbed, will they automatically label it as having lamination? I admit that I do...
[ATTACH][ATTACH][ATTACH]Hello everybody. There are a lot of people that don't believe in the 1914/3 overdate, but this coin should be proof...
Die clashes can occur on the incused areas/design of a coin. This masked indian die clash is one example of this.
Hope this helps I've owned several of the 3 1/2 legged buffalo nickels over the years, and a couple of the 2 feather coins. What I've read about...
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