One Sided Dime

Discussion in 'Error Coins' started by FiveNineJeep, Nov 25, 2010.

  1. FiveNineJeep

    FiveNineJeep New Member

    As a cashier, I work with easily hundreds of dollars on nearly a daily basis. I often buy out random coins I find, such as the old silver dollar coins, canadian and other foreign currency. However one day as I cracked open a roll of pennies I couldnt help but notice a dime was in the roll.. After further inspection I came to realize it was one sided, its in good condition.

    Any comments, concerns, ect? Id like to know what others think about this coin. Even if it was of value, I have no intention of parting with it.


    P1030413!.jpg P1030415!.jpg P1030419.jpg

    The first picture displays the back, obviously. The second is where the face of the coin should be, but its lacking...
    The third picture is with it up against a normal dime(right) vs strange dime (left). They are not the same thickness, I dont have a tool to measure exact specifics.

    Thoughts please?
     
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  3. eric0911

    eric0911 SMS-71

    It looks like the nickel layer and design got rubbed off on the front. This would also explain the thinkness.
    Welcome, by the way.
     
  4. FiveNineJeep

    FiveNineJeep New Member

    Thank you :]
    And what could potentially have cause the nickel layer to get rubbed off?
     
  5. bigjpst

    bigjpst Well-Known Member

    looks to me like machine/grinding marks. most likely lathe
     
  6. FiveNineJeep

    FiveNineJeep New Member

    If it was a lathe, or some kind of grinder the markings would be more circular rather than straight and at an angle, atleast thats how it always was during my 5 years in shop class and wood tech back when I was in middle school and high school. And its perfectly smooth on the faceless side as well, which also made me wonder because it would have left imperfections or an uneven surface atleast.
     
  7. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    Post mint damage by someone grinding off the obverse.
     
  8. FiveNineJeep

    FiveNineJeep New Member

    Yes but if someone did grinding, then how is the surface perfectly smooth? When you do any kind of grinding on any kind of surfaces that would leave some grooving behind.
     
  9. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    Not if you're good and if you use very fine grit. Think about this, grinding is how the mirror finish fields are created on proof dies. See any grooves there?
     
  10. jloring

    jloring Senior Citizen

    We do this all the time at work... with a little care, you can polish to a mirror finish.
     
  11. FiveNineJeep

    FiveNineJeep New Member

    I see the grooves but what jloring makes sense now, ive got experience mostly in wood working, and a majority of the time I worked with metal was just sheet metal so nothing special. :]
     
  12. abe

    abe LaminatedLincolnCollector

    Maybe a beltsander...
     
  13. bigjpst

    bigjpst Well-Known Member

    there are definately grooves in a circular pattern, if not a lathe then possibly an end mill, but PMD regardless of what tool did the damage its damage.
     
  14. 50cent

    50cent What A steal

    some what common coin that's all i know
     
  15. oregonxv

    oregonxv New Member

    There is a flaw in the grinding or sanding theory. The third picture shows the single sided coin as the thicker of the two. If it had been finished to remove the original face it would have been accomplished by removing material, making it thinner. If FiveNineJeep has the two reversed in the photo then it wold make sense.
     
  16. CashDude

    CashDude Member

    I could tell immediately that it was machined off by the second pic. Look at the perfectly symmetrical cutting lines all around the surface.
     
  17. rotobeast

    rotobeast Old Newbie

    Stuck in a clothes dryer.
     
  18. coleguy

    coleguy Coin Collector

    It is possible for clad coins to lose their bonding and peel apart in layers, though I can't say if thats the case with this example as I've only ever seen such pieces already authenticated. But I do remember the side that the bonding separated from was anything but smooth.
    Guy
     
  19. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    Yes a layer will sometimes fall off, but if it falls off before striking the side with the missing layer tends to have a very good if some what weakend inage like it is supposed o have. If it falls away after striking the surfaces are typically rough, but the struck image still shows.
     
  20. JustinHoward

    JustinHoward YoungNumismatist

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