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Is This A Quarter Struck On A Dime Planchet?

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 Posted 05/10/2020  09:47 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Coinfrog to your friends list
OP - What makes you think this?



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 Posted 05/10/2020  10:06 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add bobby131313 to your friends list
A quarter struck on a dime planchet will not strike up fully, there's just not enough material to go around.

Is-This-A-Quarter-Struck-On-A-Dime-Planchet?

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 Posted 05/10/2020  10:06 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Chase007 to your friends list
to Community.
It most likely is a metal detector find showing heavy oxidation/environmental damage, it's a spender.
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 Posted 05/10/2020  11:04 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add fplagge to your friends list
I would have thought that the diameter of your quarter alone would have told you that it could not have been struck onto a dime planchet.
At any rate, welcome to the forum! There are many very knowledgeable collectors here to assist you with any numismatic questions you may come up with.
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 Posted 05/10/2020  11:14 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Still In Circ to your friends list
I don't believe that to be a Quarter Struck on dime planchet. Looks like washing machine coin.
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 Posted 05/10/2020  11:37 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Conder101 to your friends list

Quote:
It is lighter than a regular quarter

How much lighter? Is it ACTUALLY lighter, or just it just SEEM lighter?
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 Posted 05/10/2020  2:14 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Codawg213 to your friends list
I can only say that it feels lighter right now but I'm gonna go weigh it an a bit! It is also a decent ammount thinner than any other quarter and when you drop it and another quarter it has a completely differwnt sound?
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 Posted 05/10/2020  3:46 pm  Show Profile   Check nss-52's eBay Listings Bookmark this reply Add nss-52 to your friends list
Here's my FREE opinion. No, it isn't a quarter struck on a dime planchet.
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 Posted 05/10/2020  3:52 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add coop to your friends list
There was a year where they used the wrong stock and cut quarters on it. The weight on these was under and the strike was weaker:
Is-This-A-Quarter-Struck-On-A-Dime-Planchet?
But I agree it looks like a normal coin If it were struck on a dime planchet there would be a lot of fall over on the coin:
Is-This-A-Quarter-Struck-On-A-Dime-Planchet?
Is-This-A-Quarter-Struck-On-A-Dime-Planchet?
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 Posted 05/10/2020  7:40 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add merclover to your friends list
Your quarter is suffering from environmental exposure causing damage to the obverse surface, and no, no way is it on a dime planchet. Not only can you see by other photos of true examples, yours looks to be the same size of your other quarter example. Dime planchets are considerably smaller and thinner. If you were looking at the clad layers, they can vary from coin. There is a lot of real estate on a quarter that wouldn't fit on the smaller dime planchet. Good eye for spotting this quarter of yours to be different from the average quarter, but it appears to just be harsh exposure to the elements. Keep searching!

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 Posted 05/15/2020  05:25 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Codawg213 to your friends list

Is-This-A-Quarter-Struck-On-A-Dime-Planchet?

Then why does it just weigh 5grams? No way it lost .7 OT .8 grams and it siunds different then other quarters!
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 Posted 05/15/2020  06:19 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Jim0815 to your friends list
Your coin is normal with normal wear and tear. I have a 1943 steel cent that weighs 3.0 grams and it is steel and not copper. Sometimes planchets can be thick or in my cents case thick. You coin may have been light before exposure to the environmental damage.
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 Posted 05/15/2020  08:28 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Petespockets55 to your friends list
There might also be the possibility that it is a Magicians coin.

Two coins tooled with a lathe and it would be hollow inside.
(With your coin weighing 5.0 grams it is only 12% under weight- 5.0/5.67)
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 Posted 05/15/2020  11:00 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Conder101 to your friends list
8% underweight. Minimum weight for a quarter is 5.4 grams.

The reason I asked for the weight was to check the possibility of struck on dime stock. Too heavy to be struck on dime stock. Struck on dime stock weight would be roughly 3.06 grams.
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