It has been almost 48 hours since @Pennys2pesos was last seen on these forums. Maybe she works for the fire department or the police department. Yeah, right! I think your $2 notes are safe, Fred! Chris
You don't think it's an example of the extremely rare, well, actually not all that rare around here Blurred Obverse/Blurred Reverse error?
Here are some fine examples from my metal detecting adventures Clad coins and even nickels are composed of Cupro-Nickel.
The mint also stopped using copper planchets in 1982 more that 20 years before the OP's coin was struck. They use zinc planchets with copper plating.
Too bad it is environmentally damaged, otherwise it would be a nice thick planchet error being at leat .3 grams overweight.
That's a corroded Cent.. So who is wrong now? You! And.. Its a larger blank planchet that won't fit into a smaller chamber.. What the heck is a de?
Ok, so everyone is wrong because you're the expert. Put a normal cent down and lay the dime on top of it. You will see the cent is larger, thus the cent cannot fit in side the dime collar. If you come here to learn then except what the people with knowledge tell you.
Maybe the OP is waiting for one person to side with her and magically @Randy Segura pops up. I guess everyone can now sleep soundly knowing that they have been properly schooled by an expert.
Let him learn the HARD way. He refuses to listen and is basing his "opinion" on the "opinion" of a LCS who probably has no clue about errors. As for him understanding, not likely. Thanks for you expertise in these matters paddyman Semper Fi Phil
Gee Whiz, I wish I was as smart as you. I could open my own CT and be the only smart "A.." A site of 1...