On the 70-D, you can look at the mint mark location. Up until 1990, mint marks were punched into each individual die by hand therefor no two were...
Yep. Exposed to acid. PMD.
Fossilized cow dung? :D
Tommy, I just pulled a few Lincoln Wheat 1957D DDO003s out of a roll. If you've never seen the (somewhat) unusual doubling on LIBERTY that took...
That's a really nice find.
Regardless of whether or not your pictures show doubling or an RPM, there is one way to tell with 100% certainty that this is not WDDO027. Do you...
That's a great find. You're attribution is correct.
The 1970 is not WDDO-027. I don't see any doubling at all. The 1970-S is a result of machine doubling.
Do you have photos? It's going to be worth more for the RPM than the minor doubled die. Everything depends upon the shape of the coin though.
Not bad at all for that price.
The 1955 is die deterioration. I don't see anything but damage on the 58.
The past several auctions of 64RB on Great Collections and Heritage Auctions have sold in the $350-$380 range. That includes PCGS.
Unless you just really like the look, or if you think that in hand you can get a higher grade out of it, I'd pass. You should be able to easily...
I don't know what the asking price is, so I can't say if it's a good deal or not. However, it's a good looking coin. I like it.
I never see them in circulation here in the South. When I go to New York, I get them in change all the time. I guess people use them for the subways.
The strike on this coin is solid.
It's a die crack. These "roping" die cracks from the tail of the 9 to the mint mark were very common on wheat cents from the 50s.
I think what the OP is seeing is something that looks very similar to OMM-002. Unfortunately from these pics you're not going to know until you...
Nickels can and have been struck on cent planchets. That might be what you are seeing with the google search. However, your nickel is normal.
Can you crop the image in your software so that you are showing us a closeup of just the mint mark?
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