Trade Dollar Struck with 10 Cent Blanking Dies; Struck on a Type 1 Blank w/ Edge Reeding

Discussion in 'Error Coins' started by JCro57, Nov 29, 2019.

  1. JCro57

    JCro57 Making Errors Great Again

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  3. Heavymetal

    Heavymetal Supporter! Supporter

    Wow Joe! That must have cost ya a couple nickels
     
  4. JCro57

    JCro57 Making Errors Great Again

    Both are fake.

    However the Trade Dollar is 90% Silver, same weight, and same diameter. Probably made from melted junk silver and struck with fake dies.
     
  5. YoloBagels

    YoloBagels Well-Known Member

    Other than the graininess, the first thing that kind of gave it away to me was "how did a trade dollar with that error get so circulated?"

    Still pretty interesting though. Do any authentic specimens of this error exist?
     
  6. atcarroll

    atcarroll Well-Known Member

    I'm going to go out on a limb and say no. There's no way to get edge reeding on a blank that's so undersized in a collar meant for a dollar.
     
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  7. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    Ever seen a holey dollar and dump? The "edge reeding" is just the shear marks from bunching it out.
     
    thomas mozzillo and tibor like this.
  8. JCro57

    JCro57 Making Errors Great Again

    A holey dollar and dump? I dont know what either of those mean.
     
  9. JCro57

    JCro57 Making Errors Great Again

    Even more absurd is the fact that this dime-sized planchet just happened to be struck exactly in the center of a larger die.

    This whole scenario is virtually almost impossible
     
    YoloBagels and Stevearino like this.
  10. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    Australia early 1800's, they had a shortage of coinage so inorder to increase the number of coins, and to help keep them form being exported they took Spanish dollars and punched a "piece" out of the center of them. The larger piece was struck with a die to put an inscription around the hole valuing them at five shillings. This was the holey dollar. The piece punch out was also over struck to create a second coin with a value of 15 pence. This was referred to as a Dump. The combined value of the two pieces was now 6 shillings 3 pence, while the original dollar was 4 shillings 9 pence. The new overvaluation was intended to make them worth more localy than they would be if exported. Since the Dump was not struck in a collar it would still show the shear lines on the edge from bing punched out just like the OP
    coin" does.

    [​IMG]
     
  11. YoloBagels

    YoloBagels Well-Known Member

    They were basically reales that had a hole punched through the middle by the Australian gov't in the early 1800's, and the middle piece was re-coined into a new coin. Kind of like a coin giving birth :hilarious:

    holedollaaaaaaaaar!.jpg
     
    JCro57 likes this.
  12. JCro57

    JCro57 Making Errors Great Again

    Fascinating story and a great history lesson in world numismatics.
     
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