2004 D Silver colored penny

Discussion in 'Error Coins' started by LouSnyder, Feb 5, 2005.

  1. LouSnyder

    LouSnyder New Member

    The 2004 D silver colored penny my daughter has is a duplicate of a regular penny except for the uniform silver gray color. I looked on the US Mint sight and different on-line searches but have not found any information of 2004 "error" pennies. I've spoke with a few local dealers - some jumping at it and others not caring. How can I safely find out if this penny has been manually altered or if it is a true find?

    Thanks for any help and/or advice you may be able to give.
     
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. jody526

    jody526 New Member

    Hi, Lou.

    You will first need to weigh the coin, to within 1/100th of a gram.

    Let us know what you come up with.
     
  4. LouSnyder

    LouSnyder New Member

    Any suggestion where I might find a scale that finite? I have a grams scale but needless to say it does not do 100th!

    Thanks for your help.
     
  5. satootoko

    satootoko Retired

    Any jewelry stores in your neighborhood?

    BTW, have you read this? :D

    The instructions call for 1982 or later coins because that was the first year that Lincoln cents were minted from copper-plated zinc, instead of bronze.
     
  6. LouSnyder

    LouSnyder New Member

    Thanks for the link. That is exactly what our concern is - chemical alteration. One dealer said there is a chemical test that can be done to determine if the penny has been chemically altered however if it proves negative the new chemical will have ruined the "unaltered" state of the original coin. There is a greater probability it has been altered - but on the per chance!! - why not check it out.

    I found it very interesting that an obvious instructor would encourage students to alter US coinage. I thought that was illegal?

    Thanks for the info and suggestion of a jeweler - I'll give that a try.
     
  7. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    <I found it very interesting that an obvious instructor would encourage students to alter US coinage. I thought that was illegal?>

    Nope, it is perfectly legal. It's only illegal if the alteration is done with the intent to defraud.
     
  8. JBK

    JBK Coin Collector

    Sounds like a possible unplated planchet to me. Be careful, as zinc tarnishes and corrodes easily.
     
  9. bikermama45

    bikermama45 Junior Member

    Hi. I am a newbie, so if I've got this wrong, forgive me! I also have a 2004 silver penny, no D. What's up with these? Thanx! :)
     
  10. desertgem

    desertgem Senior Errer Collecktor Supporter

    This comes up very often. It is most likely ( probably 99.99%) a remnant of an experiment in one of chem lab books for middle and high school chemistry. Here
    is a video on making Gold and Silver appearing cents.

    http://www.metacafe.com/watch/1262456/make_a_gold_penny/

    Students, after doing it and showing every one, usually just puts it into circulation as soon as the novelty runs out. Probably 100,000 of these are made every term.

    Jim
     
  11. foundinrolls

    foundinrolls Roll Searching Enthusiast

    If you can post pictures, we can tell you what you have. It could be a legit error , it could have had the plating removed, or it could be plated like millions of others that have been sold on TV, for example.

    A picture would be a great help!

    Thanks,
    foundinrolls
     
  12. Carol Foster

    Carol Foster New Member

    I also have a 2004 silver penny
     
    Last edited: Jul 18, 2016
  13. Carol Foster

    Carol Foster New Member

    I have an 2004 silver penny. Is it for real?
     
  14. John D Broughton

    John D Broughton New Member

    This is weird because I have a 2004 D penny that is good in color a totally different color than any penny I've seen
     
  15. John D Broughton

    John D Broughton New Member

    2004 D penny that is gold in color
     
  16. Collecting Nut

    Collecting Nut Borderline Hoarder

    A 10 year old thread.
     
  17. Fred Weinberg

    Fred Weinberg Well-Known Member

    If it's dark, dull, and grey, it's been de-plated

    If it's bright and shiny, it's be re-plated

    Rinse and repeat, again and again
     
  18. Antoine Ripa

    Antoine Ripa New Member

  19. Antoine Ripa

    Antoine Ripa New Member

    Is there a penny that silver and copper
     
  20. Antoine Ripa

    Antoine Ripa New Member

Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page