You should get a job grading coins. I'm sure they have a whole team that identifies forgeries and PMD, lol
No one wants it and this is a piece of junk. It is now worth 6 cents after all that sanding and grinding.
What I see is the same as in the other thread you did on this coin. It’s been damaged. I’ll add that someone had a serious hatred for Roosevelt and that’s why his face is missing. Not an error of any kind.
And I get stammered for trying. Not asking for sympathy but someone can come intentionally to cause problems. Just saying. I’m not bitter! Just do not want anyone to think I’m here for trouble. Love the finds you found! The “S”. You have me digging lol. Thanks.
Glad to see you're still with us! When you find your S's, post them over on my thread, not here, lol! (I know you're not looking for trouble )
I came close to not viewing this thread due to the lousy title spelling, but went ahead and looked. Sorry I did now. Wasted my time for sure. Any poster that won't take the time to spell out their question isn't worth my time to give an answer. Better luck next time, if there is one.
Yesterday, today, and any tomorrow, it's still going to be PMD. Now you must accept it okay, thanks for posts.
I used to recreate similarity PMD in many early threads. But it takes some effort sometime. If one ever has done any metal work it's usually easy ... jsut think it through. Of course the question "why would someone do this" as the reasoning of it being a mint error is of course expecting the person doing the damage to really care that they're damaging a coin that has no value to them. We chatted in the past how coins were many times cheaper than "standard" solutions for using as a spacer or what not. Want to level a refrigerator.. use a quarter or two or pay $1+ for things you slide the legs. Depends how you value your (a) money + time [to go to a store and find the solution ] in relation to how (b) people's numismatic valuation of money. Which both of those at odds of each other.