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Replies: 13 / Views: 1,515 |
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Member
United States
703 Posts |
wow, check out the link. another ugly coin, LOL!!!! http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dl...MEWN:IT&rd=1I had and off center coin and a struck thru capped die coin, but I don't think I had an off center struck thru cap die ANACS Slabbed until now. That "Error Type Set" I have keeps getting bigger.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2724 Posts |
I like the fact that you are picking up these errors. Too often they are overlooked and more often than not undervalued. You should like this one: 
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Member
 United States
703 Posts |
WOW!!!!!!!!!!!!
ND That is AWESOME. Very Nice indeed!
Can I have it?
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2724 Posts |
This one went to the Bower's Auction where it fetched over a grand.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
867 Posts |
Yet another cool find! ND- how did your coin get like that? Multiple strikes on a piece of scrap metal? Slightly educated guess... Looks like it was chewed on or something!  Rachel [:p]
Edited by Kyra 08/15/2005 8:50 pm
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Valued Member
United States
138 Posts |
I kick myself sometimes when I see the price of errors these days. In the 90's I got offcenter cents from coin room workers by the thousands...yep, in bags of 1000 pieces per bag and I'd usually buy several bags at once...for .45 each! In each bag there would be several coins that were smashed to the size of half dollars...some struck multiple times, many many die caps, saddle strikes, double and triple strikes, etc. Anything that was large and/or not the right size that wouldn't go through the shaker sorter, which has cent sized holes in the bottom. The coin room workers were allowed to buy them for face value and they were delighted to sell them to me. I was selling them in quantity for .55-.65 cents each and pulling out the big ones to sell to error dealers. At the time I used to think that I really should put a few of these away but the fact is they came so frequently and in such quantity that I never thought they would dry up. Then two things happened. A coin room worker on the eastern seaboard found a sac dollar a few months before they were supposed to be released...he bought the coin for face, took it to a local coin dealer who in turn sent photos to Coin World and Numie News...it made such a big splash that the coin service company was embarrassed (and probably chastised by the mint), so they forbid their employees from buying any coins. The second thing is that the mint tightened up quality control about that same time and the flow of errors was virtually shut off. Another fun and profitable market went away. I distinctly remember before the end came, one of the coin room managers I used to know told me that they'd received an entire black box of coins that were all offcenter. The black boxes are waist high and moved around with forklifts. I'm not sure but I think each box contains $3k in cents. Can you imagine that many shiny new offcenter pennies in one spot? He said they'd had to send it back to the mint...what a waste :(
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2724 Posts |
quote: Originally posted by Kyra Multiple strikes on a piece of scrap metal? Slightly educated guess...
You are right. We picked up a few a while back, and held on to them. All were placed in the Bowers auction and saw fantastic prices. Here are a few more. 1999 Connecticut Quarter struck on Aluminum scrap  Undated clad dime bonded with metal.  Undated Sacagawea struck on Aluminum 
Edited by national dealer 08/16/2005 09:55 am
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Valued Member
United States
194 Posts |
Very cool pictures. I am still flabbergasted that folks pay big bucks for these mistakes, however I am paying attention!  Looking at them, the first thing that comes to mind are peices of Arnold Schwartzenegger in the first terminator!!! Chunks of metal flying everywhere! LOL. Thanks for posting the pics. Margaret
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2724 Posts |
Monster errors are beginning to come into their own now. Since the Mint started better quality control proceedures, these types of coins have gone the way of the dodo bird. People are realizing that you cannot just go out and find these. Paying top dollar will become the norm in a few more years as these coins get placed in top collections. There are still many that are WAY undervalued. I am not talking about coins that you need a microscope to see the flaw, but coins such as these pictured. It amazes me that some like these can still be picked up for a few hundred bucks.
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Member
 United States
703 Posts |
ND shhhhh..... I'm NOT done buying. :)
Edited by Errorcoins 08/16/2005 12:20 pm
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Pillar of the Community
United States
867 Posts |
Errorcoins and ND- I wish you guys could meet one of my co-workers. He and his dad used to run a coin shop, and he has a really nice album full of all sorts of errors. I can just see the three of you sitting around comparing errors and shooting the breeze. He brought his collection in one time to show me, but he had to wipe the drool off the album when I was done. The coolest thing he had was an awesome clamshell quarter. Don't see too many of those!
Rachel [:p]
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Member
 United States
703 Posts |
Kyra, yes indeed.... I love seeing error coins, especially major one of a kind errors, the bigger the better.
Nd you sure have run aross some great errors. Any nice ones in your personal collection?
Tradernick, Man that experience sounds awesome! Which I had a chance to do something like that, can't now. No more major errors....hmmmm.
As for the coin that started this thread........I got it today and boy is it a nice coin. Undergraded imo but that's fine by me. Under a lupe the late stage capped die part looks awesome plus it's off center to boot.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2724 Posts |
Currently I only have 2 U.S. coins in my private collection. The original 1864 Two Cent coin that started it all (my career) The Missouri Waffled Coin I have a few Roman coins and some counterfeits and that is about it. Everything else is owned by my firm. I do photograph every coin now, so I have a personal photographic record of almost 3000 coins.
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Valued Member
United States
146 Posts |
These are great, how do they ever get into circulation like that
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Replies: 13 / Views: 1,515 |
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