Definitely a San Francisco minted coin. Why would you say it is a details grade, did you break it out of a holder? BTW posting once is enough.
Whenever I hear "In God We Trust" a little voice in the back of my mind adds "All Others Pay Cash"
They might or might not, but as long as they are cordial, why not be cordial to them.
For credit cards, they provide some protection for your purchases and if you pay them off on time, you make money...$300 last year for me on one.
Or KFC...
Touch your nose or ear with your thumb, press your thumb on a relatively new cent, wait.
This kind of "error" is caused by a filled die. The concave image on the die gets filled with grease or oil and doesn't render the detail....
My method would be to see if it were the diameter of a modern quarter. If it is, it's a quarter, if it is larger, it's a half.
I've seen a few Hacienda tokens and wonder what this one is. I await other's comments.
One of the ongoing arguments/discussions I have with a flea-market dealer and friend is the value of common coins. If you look in the Red Book...
This is the reason I don't usually search for doubled die coins...
Proof coins have an edge that meets the face of the coin at a 90 degree angle. Your coin does have a flat edge, but you can see where it rolls...
I don't see anything.
I think they are called "dealers" and I know a few successful ones. :)
Welcome to CoinTalk. The cent you are showing appears to be a copper plated zinc cent (normal cent) which has had the size increased by placing...
0.062 g or so...
The only one of these I have is a reproduction I bought in a moment of weakness.
Interesting that the most common twenty-center is the 75 S and the second most common is the 75 CC. Good deal you got.
Are those error cents? :)
Chrysanthemum [IMG]
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