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Keep it. The notes with only two numbers that repeat are fun to collect but typically have no added value.
I believe these would be considered improper metal mix: [ATTACH] [ATTACH] [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
Thanks for the link. I never knew of this minting.
Please tell me more about this 1964 peace dollar. or the lack thereof.
DNA test required to find out who’s the owner of the hair!
Close but no cigar! [ATTACH]
Broadstruck
If anyone knows what the “reverse” of this token is referring to I sure would like to know. [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
Israel Numismatic Society counter struck on a 1944 walking liberty half dollar. [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
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What a great feeling to win something. Thank you dwhiz for your generosity.
Thanks for the story and all the research you did. Nice note.
I’m with Mountain Man. Looks like the planchet did not have full contact with the collar. May also have been damage on the collar.
No one in my family (wife, kids, relatives) gives two hoots about my collection. So when I die I don’t give two hoots if they sell it for scrap....
If these are from the same machine run they could be from dies that have been polished poorly. No pictures, no answers, just conjecture.
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What happened on the reverse is the metal did not fill the reverse die due to the metal flowing into the void on the obverse die due to the break...
Great looking cent. And a free find to boot!
Measure the thickness and compare it to know $1 bill. I supposed there could have been two sheets stuck together as it went through the printing...
Separate names with a comma.