I'm trying to put together a Capped Bust Quarter die marriage set (reduced diameter; 1831-1838) in XF. A bit tough finding them in that grade. AU and up are too expensive for me. I may have to consider also VF-35 and -30. But here's my lastest: 1833 Capped Bust Quarter, B-2, NGC XF-45 CAC But here's a question about the date area on this coin. The top of the second "3" obviously took a hit BUT What are those raised dots in the area? My only guess is die rust but I don't see that on the rest of the obverse.
Plus the clash behind the head. But that's not all I'm seeing.... hey buddy if I'm correct you're in high cotton. What is up with the "A" in America ? If that's another A to the left that makes this an FS-25-1833-901 and in Au that's a $800 coin! Xf 45 CAC got to be in the $600 +/- neighborhood Great score My Friend
Variety : repunched Letters Reverse Pup Of America URS -8 l-3 L-3 Hold your cards boys and girls.... but I think we have a BINGO!
It's a Breen 3924 no period after 25 different eagle Browning 2 Rusty obv. And yes you're correct rusted dies
Nice quarter! This die pairing has quite some character... rusty dies, repunched letters, forgetting the period after "25 C"...
Nice coin and a great variety to have. The 1833 B-2 die marriage is the same thing as FS-25-1833-901, because the B-2 die marriage employs reverse F which is the die with the O/F. Really O/F is a bad name for the variety though since it was actually a deliberate type change. The reverse die (reverse F) was made to change the shield to using 2 lines per stripe instead of 3 lines, to mirror changes in the other denominations. For whatever reason, this die was only used as the reverse of two marriages, 1833 B-2 and 1834 B-1 (FS-25-1834-901). The 1834 version is extremely common (Cherry Picker's is wrong) but the 1833 version is quite scarce. The obverse die on the 1833 B-2 is the same obverse used for the 1833 B-1. It is thought that the die became pitted from rust, and examples of early die states without pitting are extremely hard to find. Here's the obverse of my 1833 B-1 in terminal die state. This is the same state as the obverse on your coin would have been before wear. You can see here very well the excessive pitting and clashing that you noted on your coin.
Is that the clash of the reverse shield stripes on Liberty face and Neck? You can see it on both specimens.
Yes. Also significant clashes behind the cap and in front of the chin. Sent from my SM-N910V using Tapatalk
WOW!!! Thanks for all the responses. All I was shooting for was a 1833 B-2. Didn't realize it had all that stuff going for it.