1943-D Mercury Dime...looks fake

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by HistoricFind, May 28, 2012.

  1. HistoricFind

    HistoricFind New Member

    Greetings! I have been collecting US coins for about a year. I inherited a large collection of coins from my dad and while sifting thru the hundreds of mercury dimes I saw one that immediately stood out. Its 1/2 gram lighter than the typical merc dime (this one weighs 2 grams) and is definitely not silver, what the metal is I'm not sure (zinc? tin?). It also makes a different sound when jingled with other coins. It is stamped 1943 D and looks to me to be a counterfeit. This picture is it laying on the scanner bed with the highest resolution I could get it, just a weird looking coin. A curiosity for sure....
    fake.jpg
     
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. ldhair

    ldhair Clean Supporter

    Looks like it may have had an acid bath. Don't think that would take away a half gram. Poor quality cast copy? Interesting coin.
     
  4. jloring

    jloring Senior Citizen

    My first inclination is that this is a heavily corroded coin, possibly environmental damage from acidic soil. Often corroded coins do weigh less (but I don't think half a gram... is your scale accurate to at least tenths of a gram?), and will make a "different sound when jingled". Are you 100% positive it isn't silver? Common coins such as this are counterfeited less often, as the numismatic value is low. Possibly a contemporary example (poor quality as Larry mentioned), but I'm still leaning towards damaged.
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page