Carlos doubling on coins means nothing unless the doubling is from a coin die that was accidentally hubbed twice during the die making process...
I don't think a damaged coin is very cool , the coin rolling machines have hurt the value of a lot of coins.
looks like he is seeing demons now. the scribbled out lines looks like maybe a devil with a horn on it's head with eyes and even a mouth , this is...
I don't see anything that looks like a doubled die. the part that looks like a crack on the face is a lamination area.
regardless of whatever it is this tiny place would not matter one way or the other unless it was a valuable coin to begin with.
i know this is off topic but anyway I'm thinking if these 69 doubled dies are real the mint workers must have caught them early and destroyed all...
darn it AWORDCREATED now poor ole Abe has a real surfboard so yours lost the race LOL
from the color of the coin in the photos I would say that it is turning brown from environmental damage. a coin with a missing clad layer is pure...
do the letters show any doubling ? if they don't then I would guess that what you have is a coin with a banged up date from circulation. also I...
yes
Tommy doubled die coins are the ones that are struck by a doubled die. this means that the coin die was hubbed twice by a master die and the last...
MD
this one is from a over polished die , look at how much of the columns design that has been removed.
looks like it was struck with a grease filled die. if this was a die adjustment strike the letters along the edge would all have close to the same...
yes you could say this is die chip coin . tiny pieces of letters on the coin coin die that makes these incuse letters has been broken off , this...
would this coin be worth anything considering it's condition if it was to be one of the lesser doubled dies?
this is where a some tiny parts of the die chipped off , these are fairly common
I was thinking that the photo must have confused you a little , photos can be tricky
in the last photo the coin is laying on top of another coin,this may be what you saw to make it look like a ex - encased coin. back in the older...
it's hard to tell from looking at the photos but it is probably blisters in the copper plating which is common on the zincolns
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