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Replies: 16 / Views: 1,577 |
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New Member
United States
40 Posts |
I have a 1945 p penny with a few things I'm not sure about 5 in 1945 looks thick LIB looks thick and L is touching rim GOD has some marks on it DD or ? WE touching rim and the W has marks DD? TRUST the letters have marks on the top DD E on reverse is different from the Es Ive seen on Coppercoins but dont know if its significant or if any of it is or just MD or other. Thanks            Edited by Jessiescorpio 08/09/2018 11:53 pm
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
75164 Posts |
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New Member
 United States
40 Posts |
dam lol another sample. What about letters touching the rim or thickness of letters number etc?
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
62064 Posts |
In the LI on LIBERTY that is wider (and lower) because of grease retained in those devices. PLU on reverse is also the same issue. PSD on rim and WE area. I agree no hub doubling. When looking for enlargement of devices, the tops of the devices should be rounded and not flat. 
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Pillar of the Community
586 Posts |
 Also, it looks like the devices we're damaged from a coin rolling machine. Notice how the top half's of some of the devices are flattened a little or the technical definition "smushed down".
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New Member
 United States
40 Posts |
Gotcha. thanks for samples. btw what causes this on the 9 and 5? 
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
62064 Posts |
The die chips were the product of the thinking of the 50's wheat cents of running the dies past the normal retirement. So many coins with die events happening of the coins. A very common issue to find on this era of coins.
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New Member
 United States
40 Posts |
got it the 1957 was the first ive seen is this common on other years?
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
62064 Posts |
On the 1950's what cents. (Also the BIEs are common of this era)
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New Member
 United States
40 Posts |
older cents as these two but I guess it doesn't matter its still not an error coin on any coin. disregard
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New Member
 United States
40 Posts |
do the LIBE for 60s era pennies all vary in size?
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
62064 Posts |
Depends. They were all created (except for 1960 small date) from the same master hubs. But when a die is over polished the devices get thinner because the the bottom of the wide base of the devices are reduced.   So they should be the same, unless the dies were polished. (the devices on the 1960 small dates are a bit different)
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New Member
 United States
40 Posts |
good to know thanks for samples. would this coin be Die Deterioration as well? 6 has an extra piece of something and R is curled up on the left bottom part  
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
62064 Posts |
It looks like chips on the date, but not that it is a lamination issue where parts of the metal peeled and moved to a new location? ('6')
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New Member
 United States
40 Posts |
I tried to clean it off thought it was debris it didnt move. is this metal that was chipped when made then stuck to coin?
the 9 looks like it has horns on it lol
I doubled checked against a same year coin. the reverse found the E to have a point at the top left.
Edited by Jessiescorpio 08/10/2018 02:07 am
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New Member
 United States
40 Posts |
so would the chip on 6, horns on 9, and hooked R be a error when made? I forgot to mention the A above the E
Edited by Jessiescorpio 08/10/2018 04:26 am
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Replies: 16 / Views: 1,577 |