looks like it could be a very minor struck through...
If you think this is the same 1982 DDR as mine you are wrong again.....
21.62
His profile shows him living in Yorkshire, UK.....
the coin that got me my fifteen minutes of fame in all the major numismatic mags....
I don't think so. here is an image of another coin of Sabina, She may have just been manly looking...... [IMG]
looks like this one....http://www.coppercoins.com/lincoln/diestate.php?date=1954&die_id=1954d1mm001&die_state=lds
same as i said earlier. it was once encased in a ring like the lucky penny tokens the ring is pressed around the coin which makes the rim look...
this coin was formerly an encased coin, similar to a lucky penny..........
you should contact the seller and give them the chance to make good first....
With a total population currently at 3 this is the toughest Lincoln doubled die.....[ATTACH] [ATTACH] [ATTACH] [ATTACH] This coin no longer...
possibly exposed to bleach or other chemical that has altered the colors......
post mint damage, extreme zinc rot.....
Han wouldn't have gotten slabbed in the US section if he hadn't gone solo.........................................sorry.
if the other side is normal I would say capped die strike....
Isn't there something about separating the wheat from the chaff?... just before throwing the chaff away... ;}
the 1951 is post mint damage, something struck the coin causing movement of the copper. the 1954 is normal. prior to 1990 the mintmark was punched...
that is a nice retained cud and yes it would add value to an error collector...
just remember...buy the table, not the slab.....
which was my point in post number 5
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