I don't have a picture of the obverse. But, the owner of this coin wanted me to test and confirm the composition of some of the pattern pieces in their collection. The coin I tested, and photographed in my lab, is the same coin seen here:
http://www.currencymuseum.ca/collec...5-cents-1942
The odd part is, that this coin is catalogued as a "trial strike", but it is circulated and 100% nickel. Trial strikes are never circulated. I think it is as others surmised - a nickel planchet strike by dies intended for tombac blanks.
http://www.currencymuseum.ca/collec...5-cents-1942
The odd part is, that this coin is catalogued as a "trial strike", but it is circulated and 100% nickel. Trial strikes are never circulated. I think it is as others surmised - a nickel planchet strike by dies intended for tombac blanks.
"Discovery follows discovery, each both raising and answering questions, each ending a long search, and each providing the new instruments for a new search." -- J. Robert Oppenheimer
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My eBay store
Content of this post is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported License. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses...0/deed.en_US
My eBay store
Edited by SPP-Ottawa
11/18/2012 7:31 pm
11/18/2012 7:31 pm

























