Any value to 19th Century South American varieties?

Discussion in 'World Coins' started by Dr.Jones, May 24, 2014.

  1. Dr.Jones

    Dr.Jones Well-Known Member

    Hi y'all, I'm new to the forum so I hope I'm posting this correctly. I just picked up this 1878 Chile 20 Centavos. The "N" on the reverse is heavily doubled. The listing didn't advertise a variety and I didn't notice the doubling until I received the coin (even though it was clearly pictured in the listing)...

    Wondering (1) is this a doubled die? And (2) does that matter or add any value?

    Thanks for the help!


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  3. Volante

    Volante Well-Known Member

    The doubling might bring a slight premium if you were to point it out (assuming you sell it), but in general, errors/varieties don't add much value to non-US coins. The market simply isn't big enough.

    That being said, there are some well-known varieties of certain coins that can bring a substantial premium. But doubling on a random coin isn't likely to add much value.
     
  4. Dr.Jones

    Dr.Jones Well-Known Member

    Thanks so much for the info!


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  5. Bayern1900

    Bayern1900 Member

    I peraonally like it. I would pay a little bit extra for the doubling, but some may not. Nice coin!
     
  6. doug444

    doug444 STAMPS and POSTCARDS too!

    Curious how you could have such heavy doubling on just one letter, although there are traces on the E and T on either side.
     
  7. Dr.Jones

    Dr.Jones Well-Known Member

    I know. I was thinking the same thing. Not sure how this could happen...


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  8. doug444

    doug444 STAMPS and POSTCARDS too!

    The best I can come up with (and I don't necessarily think this is right) is that there was a tiny fragment of broken die (from previous strikes), just a tiny sliver, stuck or bonded to the regular die, and that maybe a couple dozen double-N's were struck before this fragment broke off or fell off completely.
     
  9. Dr.Jones

    Dr.Jones Well-Known Member

    Could be. Thanks for the input!


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  10. doug444

    doug444 STAMPS and POSTCARDS too!

    The "dot" directly above the E in CENTS -- is it above or below the surface of the coin? If it's above, that "sort of" supports my prior theory.
     
  11. Numismat

    Numismat World coin enthusiast

    Not die doubling, but re-cut or re-punched letters. This is a common occurrence on 19th and early 20th century coins from many different countries. Generally does not add value to collectors who specialize in such coin types.
     
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