And he was never heard from again!
What's the giveaway, the color?
I am experienced. Your definition of experienced seems to be whomever agrees with you. You've looked at hundreds of coins, I've looked at...
They look authentic to me.
You are wrong. It is a pit being created by the zinc corrosion under the plating. Btw, the correct term is doubled die, which this is not.
Nah, that's a trick of the lighting.
Best thing is don't look for things on coins that aren't possible. People are always posting about seeing extra mint marks or numbers that one...
Even better is get a Redbook and look at the values of coins and their grades. That alone will keep you from making a costly mistake.
No one said it was sanded off. Raised devices on coins are set into the die. If the areas fill with grease the metal can't flow in, resulting in...
No they are not. It just looks like a bubble.
Glad I wasn't seeing things!
I'm still trying to figure out how someone could think it was done accidentally.
I do see what appears to be a major clash.
Stop watching YouTube videos!
No, you're paying a premium for a known commodity. CRHing is at face value.
Besides, there is absolutely no doubt that's a 1948. Unless you're blind!
Definitely 3.
It's worth one cent. The coin has plating issues around the mintmark.
Looks like the normal reverse to me.
Without pics I'll give it a 70% chance it's md.
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