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1953 Lincoln Wheat Cent Explanation Wanted On This One Please

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 Posted 05/22/2022  08:51 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Alpha33 to your friends list

Quote:
Appears to be a rather damaged '53 (Philly) wheat cent--dings, hits, gouges, moved metal. Assume the reverse looks pretty much the same? Post-strike damage accumulated over the years, plus a bit of environmental staining/tarnish. Bottom line, coin didn't leave the striking chamber in that condition


I get that, but why the lack of damage where the base of the one used to be?
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 Posted 05/22/2022  09:03 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Alpha33 to your friends list
How could the "ONE" be struck in the direction of the arrow and not leave any damage to the area where the base of the "ONE" used to be?

1953-Lincoln-Wheat-Cent-Explanation-Wanted-On-This-One-Please

the area where the base of the "ONE" used to be

1953-Lincoln-Wheat-Cent-Explanation-Wanted-On-This-One-Please
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 Posted 05/22/2022  09:04 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Alpha33 to your friends list
It's like there was never anything there to begin with.
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 Posted 05/22/2022  09:11 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Spence to your friends list
@alpha, trying to guess how an object gouging one area of a coin might have affected other areas of a coin seems like tilting at windmills to me. I see nothing suggesting that the date was not normal when this coin was struck. You have a well-circulated and damaged common-date Wheat cent. Value is two or three times face value.
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 Posted 05/22/2022  09:14 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add John1 to your friends list
A once normal coin now beat up by circulation...PMD. Please properly crop photos before posting...thanks.
John1
Edited by John1
05/22/2022 09:15 am
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 Posted 05/22/2022  09:23 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Coinfrog to your friends list
I just see a damaged coin. Agree that cropping your images will help in evaluating details.
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 Posted 05/22/2022  10:12 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Alpha33 to your friends list

Quote:
@alpha, trying to guess how an object gouging one area of a coin might have affected other areas of a coin seems like tilting at windmills to me. I see nothing suggesting that the date was not normal when this coin was struck. You have a well-circulated and damaged common-date Wheat cent. Value is two or three times face value.


First of all I don't give a crap about the value.
second, How could the "ONE" be struck in the direction of the arrow and not leave any damage to the area where the base of the "ONE" used to be?
lastly, I merely found it interesting.
The coin gods have spoken. "Something happened", now I know.
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 Posted 05/22/2022  10:24 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Alpha33 to your friends list

Quote:
Please properly crop photos before posting...thanks.
John1


Even if I knew what properly cropped photos were, I don't know how. I've posted hundreds of pic here without "cropping", suddenly it's important? I'll try my best.
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 Posted 05/22/2022  10:30 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Alpha33 to your friends list

Alpha33 out..............................................................
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 Posted 05/22/2022  10:55 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add SamuelPickwick to your friends list
I agree that is a little odd; how could the original "1" be damaged like that. It looks like the 1 shifted up, curled, and turned into a "c". Plate tectonics?
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 Posted 05/22/2022  11:21 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add bobby131313 to your friends list

Quote:
How could the "ONE" be struck in the direction of the arrow and not leave any damage to the area where the base of the "ONE" used to be?


This is 100% the wrong question.

The question should be...

How can the one be struck in the direction of the arrow during the minting process.

The answer is it can't, so it can't be an error.

Billions of ways to damage a coin. Finite number of ways for an error to happen.
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 Posted 05/22/2022  11:27 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add bobby131313 to your friends list

Quote:
Even if I knew what properly cropped photos were, I don't know how.


Click here. Makes it easier for people to help you and with all the extraneous image gone, you can upload much better pics. After a few times it only takes 30-45 seconds.
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 Posted 05/22/2022  4:25 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add BadThad to your friends list
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 Posted 05/23/2022  3:08 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Dearborn to your friends list
This is damage. How it happened? Took a shallow hit during circulation. Copper is a very soft metal and sometimes the material can get moved around and over time the spot where the 1 used to be could have been smoothed over and erasing any sigh it was ever there. Look at the overall surface of the coin, almost all of the details of this coin has been erased.
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 Posted 05/23/2022  3:57 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add nick10 to your friends list
looks like the digit 1 was hit much the same spotty way Abe's coat was
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