BUFFALO NICKEL ABNORMALITY

Discussion in 'What's it Worth' started by Dakotaskyspy, Mar 9, 2019.

  1. Dakotaskyspy

    Dakotaskyspy New Member

    I was recently looking through my buffalo nickels and noticed something really strange. It appears the "E" in five was struck incorrectly. Are there others out there with this error? Does it add to the value.
     

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  3. cpm9ball

    cpm9ball CANNOT RE-MEMBER

    @Dakotaskyspy

    Welcome to the neighborhood!

    It looks like circulation damage to me.

    Chris
     
  4. Santinidollar

    Santinidollar Supporter! Supporter

    That is sort of strange but I think Chris has called it right.

    Welcome to CT!
     
  5. ken454

    ken454 Well-Known Member

    not an error, just very old damage..
     
  6. ldhair

    ldhair Clean Supporter

    I'll go with damage as well.
     
  7. Dakotaskyspy

    Dakotaskyspy New Member

    If someone can explain how the lower leg of the E has shifted upward I will agree. This image is from 120 power magnification. My intent is not to dispute but rather figure out how or what caused this abnormality.
     

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  8. Santinidollar

    Santinidollar Supporter! Supporter

    Coins can collect all sorts of amazing damage, some of it deliberate. They are far from indestructible.
     
  9. ken454

    ken454 Well-Known Member

    the coin could have taken a nasty hit in 1937 which pushed up the leg of the E and has been wearing down ever since to make it look like it does today..
     
  10. frankjg

    frankjg Well-Known Member

    You can see remnants of the scrape that pushed the metal up.

    How? No one will ever know.
     
  11. Oldhoopster

    Oldhoopster Member of the ANA since 1982

    There can be a multitude of ways for damage to occur, but only a limited way errors/varieties can occur during the minting process. Instead of saying "I don't understand how this could hAve been damaged, therefore it must be an error", you need to ask "how could this have occurred at the mint". There is no way your coin could have left the mint like that. It couldn't occur in the die making process of the striking process.

    No way to say for certain what caused the damage but it's consistent with displaced metal from a hit or gouge.

    Hope this helps
     
    cpm9ball and Magnus87 like this.
  12. Collecting Nut

    Collecting Nut Borderline Hoarder

    The bottom line in the E has taken a hit and been pushed upwards. Damaged, not an error. Good eye to spot that.

    Welcome to CT.
     
    genXmetalfan likes this.
  13. Mountain Man

    Mountain Man Well-Known Member

    I have to agree with the others that it was hit and pushed the bottom leg upwards. I can see the gouge mark where the leg should be in your magnified image. No other coins like it have been listed in any books I'm aware of. None of my 1937 show this type of damage and if it happened in the minting process (which I can't see how it could) there would be other examples. Right?
     
  14. kanga

    kanga 65 Year Collector

    Why are the closeups so grainy?
    Is that from the image resolution?
    Or did this coin get treated with Nic-a-date?
     
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