There is 0% chance that one is real!
While I have never pursued completing it, I have gone through my collection to see how many presidents I have. Thanks for posting, I may have to...
I was probably a bit high, there is no way common 1934 cents in circulated condition are going for over $100! Absolutely top price full retail in...
I would expect it to be in the 10 to 25 cent range in that condition.
The "white substance from the deterioration" is zinc rot plain and simple. Copper does not deteriorate like that.
I don't know about the weight, but it is obviously not on a copper planchet, the zinc is clearly visible on the reverse.
I am not, but my son is.
I think I got one in a museum gift shop as a kid, I know that is where I got my replica Spanish milled dollar.
Sounds perfect!
Yes, pure fantasy piece. The obverse mimics the purported Confederate cents of 1861. No Confederate marked 20 dollar coins were ever made.
Weight is only one factor and useless without pictures of the coin. Post some clear pictures and we can give you an opinion.
I agree on the double damage, hole and badly scrubbed.
I am not seeing it either, could you explain what and where it is?
Could be paint or nail polish, hard to say for sure but definitely something of the sort.
I watched your 735 coin lot video, and am sorry to say there is nothing in the individual coins you showed that was worth more than face value....
1964 nickels are extremely common, unless in higher uncirculated grade they are worth five cents.
That is definitely just damaged, you can see where the I was scraped to the side.
Welcome to the forum. Someone has just tampered with your coin, they put paint, nail polish, or something on it.
No, I think another coin has just been pressed into it, a "vice job".
I agree, your coin has been plated after it left the mint. The certificate doesn't really mean anything, it probably does not even have anything...
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