Post a pic of IGWT. Particularly the RU in Trust. That is what looks the most fake to me, but a pic focused on that area would be nice.
Sweet. Could this be an earlier stage coin struck from the same obstructed die?...
I think you have the "Ill-defined letters fake" listed here: http://www.ngccoin.com/news/viewarticle.aspx?NewsletterNewsArticleID=867 The IGWT is...
A cud includes the rim. PCGS's definition is just poorly worded.
It's probably a worthless plated quarter someone got duped into buying. There are 1000's of them in circulation.
Are you describing a cud?
For a dollar each, you got a good deal. The last one you paid about the regular price. See if it is a wide AM variety.
Wow! That's a nice one. And yes, you could probably get 50 bucks or a little more for that on ebay.
It's probably just machined off. Machining lines are easy to identify so post a pic.
Someone cleaned and whizzed the hell out of it. Maybe it was buried at some point.
Deleted.
Looks legit, but it blows my mind that someone in Philly was dumb enough to rotate the die 180 degrees while hubbing.
Looks like the 9 took a hit. And the extra 7 is probably just a scratch. The dates haven't been hand punched into the dies since the early 1900s...
That 87 is a type of die fatigue. The other one you could check coppercoins to see if it has a match. I can't tell from the pics on my phone....
No one is going to pay a premium for a 20% rotated die on a Morgan. And TC still hasn't told us if his is 20% or 160% rotated. EDIT CPM posted...
Show us a picture of the whole back of the slab. If it's 20 degrees off, it's not a big deal. If it's 160, then it's an error.
Die fatigue. Very common on wheat cents, but yours is stronger than most.
Hammer job? Or is that a Photoshop showing where to find clash marks?
On the obverse, it looks like the clad layer is peeling off because someone damaged it or a lamination problem. I can't tell from the pics. On...
It's probably grease like you said. But it's minor and doesn't add any value.
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