Yes those are either shear lines from the punching out of the blanks that have not completely wiped out by the upsetting and striking, or second...
Yes misaligned die clashes. They tend to be very popular. No. You need to understand why the mint was often low on precious metals and why the...
If they are still in the government holders it's pretty easy, at least for the 1965's. Out of the holders to some extent it is a guessing game...
There are SOME varieties that will be identified automatically, but for most of them you have to request it and pay an additional fee.
Its a Conder token from England, county of Warwickshire, city of Stratford. Catalog number is D&H 327 and it comes with seven different edge...
With those horrible picture I can't tell if the coins are fakes, but I would say that if they aren't they have been altered, These look a lot...
All the TPG's do that. And back in the days when they didn't have genuine or details slabs you would get your problem coins back in a flip...
Well you only posted a picture of one of them. I believe the D indicates it is from Denver and the 3 would be I believe the last digit of the...
Weight will tell you nothing. A coppernickel five cent piece should weigh 5.00 grams +/- .194 grams, A five cent piece struck from a copper...
A dropped letter that is retained would be flush with the surface, neither raised or incuse and it would not be made of metal so it would not have...
Do you have a picture of that? Front and back if it is two sided.
Never said they didn't exist, they are just from worn dies. Which in my opinion makes them less desirable.
Congratulations, that is only the second INS slab I have ever seen from when they were in Aston, PA. The other one has serial number 70753-01 So...
And for some reason slabbing seems to make milk spots show up.
OK, it's not your fault then, NGC got it wrong.
Good to know, I'm a C-4 member, or at least I think I still am.
Yes, it sounds like something marking the end of a war between several countries.
The problem with the google result you found is that 2.4 cent figure is the THEORETICAL price you would get if they valued the copper in the cent...
Flynn's book isn't complete either.
You can, it's a close AM
Separate names with a comma.