Looks like PMD, i see no Blakesley Effect http://dniewcollectors.blogspot.com/2012/04/blakesley-effect-on-clip-error-coins.html
here ya go http://hermes.csd.net/~coneca/content/StrikeDoublingFlyer-PDF.pdf And as for what to look for, check out these 2...
And for future reference, a die crack is raised caused by metal flowing into the crack during minting., not flat like on your coin.
Here's a nice Coneca flyer that explains and shows the difference in doubling. http://hermes.csd.net/~coneca/content/StrikeDoublingFlyer-PDF.pdf
From the Coneca Glossary at http://conecaonline.org/content/glossary.html You'll see it a lot on the early 90s (and late 80s) Lincolns. It's...
Iraqi 5 Fils KM# 125a AH 1401 (1981) Stainless Steel (non-magnetic) Worth 35 cents in uncirculated according to my Krause
Looks like either or from http://conecaonline.org/content/glossary.html
both are large dates
On picture 3 of the last 4 you posted, you can see the ridge left by whatever was used to shear off the piece. As I said before, PMD.
That would be the half dollar, not dollar
Looks like a cut to me, as in Post Mint Damage. it exhibits no Blakesley Effect, where there is a weakness on the rim opposite of the clip. See...
It's not an error since most private mints can produce any "error" they want at any time. And most aren't held to the quality of the US Mint.
No, it's a 5 Pesetas from Spain. It's a doubled die reverse
10 cents
and the die isn't what caused it, it was caused by damage after it left the mint.
10 cents and it's definatly a 1965 with damage to the 5.
One thing I like about roll searching, you can find cool coins, wheats, silvers, pre-64 nickels, with little or no cost. If a roll has nothing...
You mean silver 64 and clad 65
Makes me hungry. Is that the pacman commemorative? The mints new way of making a penny cost effective.
A woodie isn't toning per se, it's when the alloy isn't mixed properly and the differences in metal tones at different rates. From coneca's...
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