1996 Yellow D Penny

Discussion in 'Error Coins' started by PTFsemperfi, Aug 9, 2018.

  1. PTFsemperfi

    PTFsemperfi New Member

    Does anyone know what the deal is with an off-color 1996 penny and if it's worth anything? (See picture, penny on the right) I've found a few others like it online but never got a real answer as to what it is. It is very new looking for a 1996 penny and is a strange yellowish color. Anyone?
     

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  3. Idries Pappas

    Idries Pappas Well-Known Member

    Welcome to CoinTalk! Your cent looks plated to me. More pictures might help. Do you have a scale to check the weight?
     
  4. Clawcoins

    Clawcoins Damaging Coins Daily

    It just looks newer and shinier to me.

    but there are many plated cents out there .. just peruse through Merrick Mint some time to see what hits the wild (circulation) all the time.
     
  5. SilverDollar2017

    SilverDollar2017 Morgan dollars

    Better pics would help. What is the weight of the coin?
     
  6. Oldhoopster

    Oldhoopster Member of the ANA since 1982

  7. PTFsemperfi

    PTFsemperfi New Member

    Here are a couple more pictures with another penny for reference. It's definitely a different color, not just newer and shinier. I wish I had a scales that would pick up something that tiny, but I don't. I'm not a coin collector, this one just jumped out at me because it was so different from the others and it piqued my curiosity.
     

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  8. coinsareus10

    coinsareus10 Well-Known Member

    This may help.................
    1. Place the silver penny on a hot plate heated to about 570°F (300°C). Watch as the heat diffuses the zinc with the copper to form a brass alloy. This will appear as golden in color.
    2. Once the penny is a brassy/golden color, use tweezers to pick up the penny and transfer it into the wash beaker to rinse and cool.
    3. Once cooled, you have a nice gold colored penny!
     
  9. DEA

    DEA Well-Known Member

    Whoa! Does that mean that tiny sliver of copper encapsulating a zinc one-cent (1982 (partially) and moving forward) interacts with the zinc to form bronze? That is so cool! I might have to try that. Thanks for the information.
     
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