Nice find - rare enough to be worth about $100-$125 retail, imo (maybe a bit less due to circulation)
minor filled die
Clashed dies and polishing - it's portions of the Jefferson Memorial from the reverse side that you see.
It's labeling mistake. NGC used the S $1 for 'silver dollar' but that blank is clad, as can be seen in the edge photo. It's occurred on other...
An effect (worn/overused dies) see on both sides of coins in this Series, as well as Dimes in the past 10-15 years.
Typical 'S' mint weakly struck, and with worn dies to boot.
Imo - it's too corroded, and paying anything for conservation will not help it much at all. ...and will not add value to the coin, as it will...
Not a Doubled Die, imo. Looks like die deterioration and/or worn/overused dies. A fairly common occurrence on our quarters in the past 20 years.
Stain(s)
...or an uncentered broadstrike
That type of defective planchet/partial missing outer clad layer is much tougher to find than a normal 100% missing outer clad layer. Nice example.
....nevermind !
'sandwhich coin' - PMD
No picture, but I'm fairly certain it's simply been taken out of the mint set, as it's a key date.
Jim, it's damage, and carries no premium.
I've seen this on numerous Presidential Dollars. It's damage, from being jammed in the edge lettering operation. It's seen usually on errors,...
It's a collar clash The dies were slightly mis-aligned, and clashed with the reeded collar, transferring the 'reeds' to the die.
Yes, sometimes the grease, or machinery 'stuff' gets hardened/compressed as coins are struck. If it was a lamination (what happened to the...
Yes, a minor filled die - usually machinery grease Good eyes !
Die deterioration in IGWT. (worn, overused dies)
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