I was referring to the OP's post that didn't include photos, but it works for Texas Cents too, that are many times de-plated as part of the...
Not the Doubled Die everyone is looking for. It's very rare for a reason.
me neither
I see cuts/dings/damage on the obv. of this 2000 cent.
It looks familiar !
Die chip -
everything you see on the cent occurred after it was in circulation.
Surface damage after the cent was in circulation.
That's not a die crack on the '64 nickel.
It's a die chip - right
PMD
Sorry, but the doubling on the reverse side is not from a doubled die. It's the common form of doubling, called ejection/mechancial/shelf/strike...
No
If it were a piece of 'aluminum' or something similar, that was on the coin when struck, it would be flatter, and you would see a little bit of...
Thanks for posting an error coin ! I agree, a nice BU example........
Not a doubled die, imo. It's the old 'mechanical/ejection/strike' doubling, which can be confused with doubled dies..... A fairly common...
Yep, you're right, but sometimes the simplest thing to do is the fastest, most efficient, least costly, and a good determinate of what the...
PM98 is correct, of course. A coin with a 'cud' die break weighs the same as a normal coin - there is no extra metal, it's the same metal from...
Looks like a small retained lamination flap (to the left of the C in Cent)
Based on your photos, the normal edge lettering has been buffed off the edge of the coin, and the extra 'stars' are some type of damage from...
Separate names with a comma.