PMD = Post-minting damage i.e.: it didn't occur in the Mint, or when the coin was struck.
PMD
There are many many many hundreds +++ of examples of double struck coins that have reverses that look exactly like your coin posted. It occurs...
There IS the trace of design, spread out, where the other planchet prevented the rev. design from being struck on the reverse of the 2nd strike -...
The pressure of the off center strike, with the unstuck planchet underneath it , spreads/distorts the original lettering in that area from the...
I can, and should be contradicted when I'm wrong - no problem there. I'm just saying that although I can see where some view the area in...
It's damaged - see all the 'hits' and digs on the coin? One of them hit the T.
It would be an off center strike with a brockage of the reverse.
The Buff on the left is damaged; the Buff on the right looks normal.
Yes, that's what I was saying.... What you see in the distortion of the uniface reverse 2nd strike is the original rev. design from the first...
Your Double Strike has a 'Uniface" reverse; it's because another planchet slipped into the striking chamber/collar, when the second strike...
That 59-D cent is not worth grading. The small indentation on his neck is a contact mark, imo.
The bubbling is the result of improper copper plating. Like painting a wall, and you get a bubble in the paint.......
It's not a doubled die - if there is any doubling, it's the very very common ejection/mechanical doubling that occurs on all modern US coins of...
It's not a struck thru anything, imo. As others have said, it's a contact mark, probably from another ASE, but it could have been anything. I'm...
I can't see any doubling on your photos, but if there is, it's mechanical/ejection doubling;
Not worth slabbing/grading at all, but a nicer than average example. Fairly common on cents in the 1980's and early '90's..... (die clashes...
The die chip in the '9' of the date is fairly common - there are numerous examples of die chips in the date area and in Liberty on Lincoln Cents....
The cent above was removed from a "Lucky Penny" aluminum ring.
Sorry, that's not an example of copper plating bubbles. Your coin has been damaged in circulation. It wasn't struck like that, and didn't leave...
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