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Difference Between Uncirculated And Specimen Dimes

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United States
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 Posted 12/23/2018  2:07 pm Show Profile   Bookmark this topic Add aperwin22 to your friends list Get a Link to this Message Number of Subscribers
Could anyone tell me how to tell the difference between a uncirculated dime from a roll and a dime from a specimen set?
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Canada
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 Posted 12/23/2018  2:35 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add DBM to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
What year?
"Dipping" is not considered cleaning...
-from PCGS website
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United States
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 Posted 12/23/2018  3:26 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add aperwin22 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
1985
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Keith67's Avatar
United States
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 Posted 12/23/2018  3:31 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Keith67 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
What do you mean by specimen set? do you mean mint set?
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United States
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 Posted 12/23/2018  3:38 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add aperwin22 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
yes the mint set. I get confused when I see coins graded as bu, specimen and proof like. I believe the specimens have a special finish? and can't a bu coin look proof like?
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sel_69l's Avatar
Australia
21788 Posts
 Posted 12/23/2018  4:27 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add sel_69l to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
General mint policy is to use selected dies, to strike specimen? coins for collector mint sets, and to take far more care in the extraction of each coin from the coining press, to avoid bag marks.
These coins should now show any sign of damage due to rough handling after being freshly minted. They are then included in the packaging in mint sets for the collector market.

Uncirculated coins are just that.
They are ejected from the coining presses in their thousands onto piles of freshly minted coins. They are then machined counted and weighed, then bagged or wrapped for distribution to issuing banks.
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unruhjonny's Avatar
Canada
514 Posts
 Posted 01/07/2019  1:40 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add unruhjonny to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
the later 'specimen' sets use a specific die that changes the appearance of the coins - but before that started the specimen strikes of circulation coins did receive better QC than a circulation issue - you will see it mostly in the fields of the coin - they will tend to have a polished appearance, while high grade circulation strikes will be shiny, but not have the polished appearance;
I believe that the specimen strikes used a combination of higher pressure, higher quality dies, and slower speed.

What I find confuses things ALOT is that the RCM has shuffled the names of their sets.
While I was growing up there were actually three sets:

1: Proof set: highest grade coins, encased in black leatherette case with a silver dollar which actually contained silver; all coins have select satin finish; comes with specification card.

2: Specimin set: these were circulation issue coins with a higher level of quality than the actual circulation coins; came in a sliver cardboard box, with a blue booklet, and each coin in a separate case c/w spec card - to be assembled by recipient.

3: uncirculated set: this was circulation strike coins placed into a polyfilm package, placed in an envelope with a specification card.

I don't know for sure exactly how many sets are now being made, but I know that the 'specimen set' moved to a case and packaging that resembled the Proof set;
The proof set is now offered in at least two varieties;
I believe it was 1998 when the specimen coins first all received a specific lined "matte" background - which they still do;
At some point the 'uncirculated set' started to be called a specimin set, and then they were being called a 'classic set', and now I think they are back to 'uncirculated set'.
Somewhere in the mix they started offering sets in cardboard encasement, and even encased in mouse pads!?

It seems to me that the RCM is changing the number of sets offered almost every year.
Edited by unruhjonny
01/07/2019 1:58 pm
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