......or less
Can't tell anything for sure from those photos, but Feeder Finger scrapes are a possibility
Nice die chip on a more modern-dated cent.
From what I see in the photos, that dime has been chemically treated on the obv. and the other surfaces are also damaged/altered. It is not a...
If it's not minor finning, it's a minor Mis-Aligned Die
.....we'll never see him post again.
Sorry, but it's all damage. Look at the surfaces of the coin, on both sides, and compare it to a normal clad quarter.
Check online, but I'd guess that the silver version just doesn't have that word - only the gold piece. But you should be able to find a photo of...
It's not a die crack or die break
Look at the surfaces of the coin itself.
As I tell folks, you'd be surprised what people do to their coins on purpose, at all ages.
It's a packaging error, but much scarcer than the 'missing Cent or Quarter or?' that are found in sets. First 'extra' coin I've heard of in a...
I don't recall seeing this on any 51-D cents. Don't think it's a die chip. Looks like damage - see the digits and the MM
It's all damage - chemicals on the Obv. surface and lots of contact marks/dings on the Rev.
I mean the shape of the extra pc. of metal, not the rims, which are different on the two coins.
Good point, and I'd say usually, but not always, the rim damage shows. Aside from the 'color change' on the Kennedy, the Cent and Half dollar...
A rim burr is generally a small 'slice' of metal from the rim of the coin, that gets folded over the planchet before it's struck.
Looks like it could be a folded over rim burr.
They are not found in rolls, that's for sure.
Don't send 'em to PCGS - it's way too minor, and they will not be labeled as an error, imo. Leave them in the ANACS holders, and sell them on...
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