MD, sorry.
Anything can change the color on a coin, exposure to chemicals, etc. The item in the bay in the last pic isn't a die chip. It's a clash.
It's either md or die fatigue. Notice it's at a lower level than the original design. 99% of the time a dead giveaway.
One thing that really helps is to orient you photos correctly. Lot harder to see what's there with having to twist my head.
What I am seeing is apparently reflection from the lighting, giving the appearance of doubling. Take another pic of the coin at a different angle...
They will go back up next week from Friday's drop. Happens everytime wall street panics about possible rising interest rates.
I resent snide remarks like this. There are more of us "religious nuts" than the non believers. Very disrespectful! But what can we respect.
Which one is that. Obviously md. The pics of the 1988D is nothing also.
They aren't pennies!!! They are cents.
"Doubled" die.
Definitely md. The doctor is in!
Looks real to me.
Yepper, that's cause by heat.
I hate the leds. They hide the details when looking for varieties.
Both sides look like md to me. Not a "doubled" die.
The last one is struck through grease but the rest are pmd.
Those are definitely scrapes. Where the scrapes are on a coin have no rhyme or reason. I also don't see any doubling on the head.
What you show in the one set of photos are die "chips" not cuds. Cuds are connected to the rim.
The 2 is definitely wrong!
It appears to be a plating bubble that has ruptured. Add a little moisture and in no time you'll have a good case of zinc rot.
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