Yup. You will be able to retire for sure. In reality, we are all just trying to suppress the information so that we can be the ones to find all the good stuff and retire ourselves. Unfortunately you have discovered our secret.
Shh. Stop spouting our secrets. We will have to initiate you into the secret society quickly. Your special "Coinhunter777" laminated membership car will be in the mail shortly. Don't worry, as a secret society, we already know where you live o_0
You've already got it figured out, man. That's your retirement right there. Not sure why you needed to come here to ask us for anything. Congratulations on finding a unicorn.
What part of it's a real Copper Cent that was plated outside of the Mint don't you understand? It was not minted that way, it is not a Mint Error.
What in the hell are you trying to say? I'm sorry, but it sounds as if you're simply spouting off whatever terms you've heard in the past without the slightest clue as to what it may mean. And who told you nickel is non-magnetic? Additionally, why post a clear photos of a Morgan with your supposed "grail" coin nothing but a background blur? Does this really make sense?
Let me explain what happened step by step so you can fully understand. 1. the mint produces 1944 copper cents 2. One of those completely normal copper cents is plated in a magnetic metal after it left the mint 3. you find the coin and think that it's the 'rare 1944 steel cent', when really, it's a completely normal cent that was plated in a magnetic metal such as steel The coin you have is a normal copper penny like any other. A person outside the mint decided to dip it in molten steel, thus giving it a thin steel coating. They were probably trying to fool an amateur collector into believing it was struck on a steel planchet. This is not a mint error.
Almost looks like dime ms 66 near perfect sitting on ms63 but highly magnetic if it was done after mint Steel melts at 2700 and copper 1800 How could that be done
Counterfeit plated wold be non magnetic Steel plated mystery Painted silver plated silver ya I would get that Nickel plated but real steel and it was in sealed rolled not opened in 40 years ?? Will add pictures Tuesday Coin will be off to NGC 12 bucks I will know Plated after the Mint what if it is real McCoy 1 of 1 1 in Zillions
Wrong, wrong, wrong! Look it up, nickel is magnetic. Your coin is plated, nothing more. It is your money, send it in if you wish.
Plating DOES NOT involve dipping into molten metal. Google Electrochemistry. Nickel is magnetic. Your coin is either nickel plated, or chrome plated. If your coin is chrome plated, it will have a nickel plated layer between the copper and chrome. The chrome is usually thin enough that the nickel will stick to a magnet. As others have said, your coin was plated AFTER it left the mint. It's worth face value