Check ebay sold listings. That may give you some idea of what these things are selling for.
Step 1: Find Junk Step 2: Send for certification Step 3: ??? Step 4: Profit
I'm a linguist and I couldn't figure it out! Thanks! lol
uhh what?
Why can't I vote "no"? :(
Are you maybe thinking of a DCAM?
My son found it. 1994 German 2 Pfennig.
I've never watched one of these shows but have always heard how slimy these sellers are. I am watching one now since there is nothing else on....
My son finished up his first ever box of cents. That kid is one lucky sonofagun. He finished out with: 1907 IHC (his 1st CRH) 14 Wheats (oldest...
No. You have a normal 1943. From PCGS Coinfacts: [IMG]
Finished my 6 boxes of halves for the week. Fairly slim pickings today: 2x90%- 54d, 63p Franklins (which finished off a solid roll of Franklins)...
I'm going to ask(again)....Did you check any references before posting? Just curious. :rolleyes:
You're in luck. It's not a doubled die.
Super common in that area.
because of the loss of metal.
Your coin is just enviromentaly damaged. Was probably in the ground for awhile or dipped in acid or something similar.
Are you talking about the dark spot? That's just discoloration. Not an error.
Yes they can, just not as broad a spectrum as humans: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/canine-corner/200810/can-dogs-see-colors
I like that one. Cool find :)
That isn't a real red cent. Look up what a red cent looks like and compare it to yours. Your's is damaged and nasty.
Separate names with a comma.