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2002-D Nickel Whats Wrong With It?

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 Posted 01/17/2011  9:20 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Coins1371 to your friends list
I can't weight it , I have no scale. In hand it looks like a weak strike on the obverse but a normal strike on the reverse. Can that be possible?It looks real cool in hand. I just don't know how it could happen. Unless it is a filled die? I have searched $7030 in nickels last year and I have never seen one like it.
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 Posted 01/17/2011  11:32 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add penny man to your friends list
grease-filled die?
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 Posted 01/18/2011  8:56 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add thecoinczar to your friends list
I'm with biokemiswt6 on this one. It looks like the obverse's rim is missing . I have no idea how it became that way. Perhaps some others in our forum can shed some light on this mystery nickel.
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 Posted 01/27/2011  9:41 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Coins1371 to your friends list
I went to the coin shop yesterday and ask them what they through. He said it looks like a struck through, but through what he don't know. He weight the Nickel and it was right on. 5 grams. I'm still puzzled.
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 Posted 01/27/2011  10:11 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add DVCollector to your friends list
This is interesting...I'm baffled too.
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 Posted 01/28/2011  05:57 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add nickelsearcher to your friends list
You could get some 'experts' to take a look if you ask the Mod Dudes to move this thread to the "Errors" forum ....

David
Take a look at my other hobby ... http://www.jk-dk.art
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 Posted 01/28/2011  12:47 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add coppercoins to your friends list
Yup, this one's officially weird. It's not post mint damage.
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 Posted 01/28/2011  12:55 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add coop to your friends list
I suspect a deteriorating die cap. But a keeper. It would be interesting what Mike Diamond says on this coin.
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 Posted 01/28/2011  12:59 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add captainkurt to your friends list
Looks like it was not struck with enough pressure. (just speculating because I have no minting process knowledge) Hmmm, if thats the case I dont know why I am even posting...Well I am interested and wanted to chime in anyway!

The area at the back of the neck seems like it was not stuck with any presure because there is no detail there at all.
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 Posted 01/28/2011  2:00 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add biokemist6 to your friends list

Quote:
Looks like it was not struck with enough pressure.

If both sides had the same appearance that would be a possibility but the reverse is hammered. I also suspect it was struck through a die cap that had almost completely deteriorated but I have not found anything else with a similar appearance. At this point, it is just an educated guess and the best I can come up with
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 Posted 01/28/2011  9:24 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add nickelsearcher to your friends list
Sooo ... now in the proper forum ... let's examine what we can see from the photos and draw some conclusions from that ...

I see the following ...

The reverse is a normal MS Jefferson ... assuming the blue obstruction in the photo at 6pm to 7pm is just poor photography whereby the OP let the background slip over the coin.

Sooo ... conclusion from the reverse photo is that this is not a weakly struck die-adjustment coin.

Another look at the obverse offers some clues ...

Notice in both photos the obvious 'shadow' of Jefferson portrait ... best seen at the nose and forehead ... but by-and-large complete 'shadow" all around the obverse portrait.

Also ... note the fully struck hair region on the portrait behind Jefferson ear ... which tells us this portion of the hammer die was clear at the time of the strike.

Based on my limited knowledge as a newbie collector I say that this coin was struck through a deteriorating obverse die-cap .. and in such a manner that the central obverse features were clear but the rim legends were affected.

That's my opinion .... now waiting on the experts.



David

Edited for splleging
Take a look at my other hobby ... http://www.jk-dk.art
Edited by nickelsearcher
01/28/2011 9:25 pm
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 Posted 01/28/2011  9:36 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add mikediamond to your friends list
I believe this is post-strike damage. Every other coin I've seen with one face normal and the other face with a downward-sloping perimeter had been altered outside the Mint.
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 Posted 01/29/2011  02:13 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Drsandman2 to your friends list
There is only one answer.


This is obviously the portly ghost of Benjamin Franklin.
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 Posted 01/29/2011  8:34 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Coins1371 to your friends list
I would like to thank everyone for their opinion.
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