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Double Struck 1999-D Lincoln Memorial Cent With Two Dates!

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Pillar of the Community
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 Posted 05/06/2009  12:24 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Kloccwork419 to your friends list
Ended at $500!!....Wow..Nice sale there!
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 Posted 05/06/2009  12:56 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add foundinrolls to your friends list
Conder101 asks:

"How would the unpolished proof dies get to Denver considering Denver had been making their own dies for two years. The die wouldn't be coming in from outside, and for them to make it they would have had to have been shipped a proof master hub from Philadelphia."

Hypothetically... if the end of the fiscal year was coming up and Denver was real close to the end of what they had available for use as far as dies for the reverses of the cents, they would not likely make any more dies but request that any surplus reverse dies, if available at the Philadelphia Mint, be sent to Denver to be placed in to service.

If they managed to mix up dies at Philly to produce three years worth of Wide AM cents for circulation, it would not be beyond the realms of possibility that they would ship a Wide AM reverse die to Denver.

The scenario is not likely but it is also not impossible.

Thanks,
Bill

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 Posted 05/06/2009  01:10 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Morgans Dad to your friends list
Very sweet coin, would someone please explain "how this wound up being this way?
I mean was the obv die loose and did multiple strikes,while moving around being loose, being it was stuck in the collar, or to the rev die?
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 Posted 05/06/2009  01:13 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add foundinrolls to your friends list
The coin enters the coining chamber part way during the down stroke of one strike, then moves a little and as it is passing out of the area of the coining chamber it is struck again during another down stroke in the cycle.

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United States
117 Posts
 Posted 05/06/2009  02:19 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add hrhomer to your friends list
How does someone acquire a coin like this? It's not like it got into a roll...

Joe
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United States
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 Posted 05/06/2009  10:53 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add biokemist6 to your friends list
Coins like this are strictly bag finds which is why they are very difficult to find any more(the Mint discontinued shipping bag in 2001 I believe). I would assume that it would still be possible to find a different coin in one of the bags that the Mint currently sells for a premium but of course, there are many less of them produced than the number of bags that used to be shipped to banks. Also, not all denominations are available through the Mint(currently only quarters, halves, and dollars).
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 Posted 05/06/2009  12:57 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add coppercoins to your friends list
I never said it was 'likely' that Wide AM cents could come from Denver. It's highly unlikely, but the statement I was responding to made it sound impossible.
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 Posted 05/07/2009  9:42 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add mikediamond to your friends list
It's not a saddle strike. The strikes were delivered in sequence, not simultaneously.
Error coin writer and researcher.
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 Posted 05/07/2009  9:50 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Morgans Dad to your friends list
Thank-you Bill.....If this is not a saddle strike, what would it be called?
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 Posted 05/07/2009  9:53 pm  Show Profile   Check vermontensium's eBay Listings Check vermontensium's eCrater Listings Bookmark this reply Add vermontensium to your friends list
The sellers happy
swcoin.ecrater.com
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 Posted 05/07/2009  11:19 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add biokemist6 to your friends list

Quote:
The strikes were delivered in sequence, not simultaneously.

Ah yes, thanks for the correction. If it was a saddle strike the strikes would be aligned, correct?
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 Posted 05/07/2009  11:39 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add BadThad to your friends list
VERY nice coin, I like the symmetry!
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United States
198 Posts
 Posted 05/08/2009  07:58 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Jim Archibald to your friends list

Quote:
It's not a saddle strike. The strikes were delivered in sequence, not simultaneously.

Mike, I understand what your saying, but the end result is the same. Is there another name that actually corresponds to this type of off center double strike? ~ Jim
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 Posted 05/11/2009  4:49 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Conder101 to your friends list
Double struck with both strikes off-center.


Quote:
Hypothetically... if the end of the fiscal year was coming up and Denver was real close to the end of what they had available for use as far as dies for the reverses of the cents, they would not likely make any more dies but request that any surplus reverse dies, if available at the Philadelphia Mint, be sent to Denver to be placed in to service.

But they would be also be making or have stockpiled rev dies for the following year so they would have no reason to request dies from Philly
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 Posted 05/12/2009  4:07 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add foundinrolls to your friends list
But, they couldn't be placed into service until the new fiscal year. They are all counted and accounted for.
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