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Wood Grained Lincoln Cents

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First Page  Showing last 15 replies.
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 Posted 10/28/2013  07:02 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add dbrablec to your friends list
i am in the "i like them" camp. I have only about a dozen or so. I find them very fun finds.
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 Posted 10/28/2013  08:09 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add nlp coins to your friends list
I have several of them in my LWC set. Sometimes they get a bad shake from TPG on grades and authenticity. nlp
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 Posted 10/28/2013  09:38 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add oih82w8 to your friends list
I like the 1956-D with the repunched mint mark!

Woodies are nice anomaly's!
Edited by oih82w8
10/28/2013 09:38 am
Bedrock of the Community
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 Posted 10/28/2013  11:30 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add BadThad to your friends list
Nice woodies!
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 Posted 10/28/2013  1:25 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add billymac11 to your friends list
I think woodies have character. I don't want them in my regular album, but they have their own charm and I save them. And, with the metalurgical issues as their cause, I think it's a great reminder that nothing's perfect.
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 Posted 10/28/2013  2:24 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jmkendall to your friends list
I already have two complete sets of Regular Lincolns, so now I'm assembling a set of Woodies. Perhaps I'll be the first person to be able to say that? That would be an accomplishment in the world of Lincoln Collecting. And it's a short set to boot! Being from 1909 to 1982. Not counting the off metal 1983's and the 2009 bronze cents.
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 Posted 10/28/2013  2:26 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jmkendall to your friends list
Dave, that's a nice 1920 Woodie!
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 Posted 10/28/2013  6:45 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add BadThad to your friends list

Quote:
I already have two complete sets of Regular Lincolns, so now I'm assembling a set of Woodies.


Great project! However, you'll have a hard time completing such a set. For many years you just can't find woodies.
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 Posted 10/28/2013  8:04 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add CoinDan98 to your friends list
I thought about making a short set, but agreed it would be way to hard. Although I do save the superb examples from my roll hunting.
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 Posted 10/28/2013  9:16 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jmkendall to your friends list
BadThad, I probably have 50 to 60 percent done already. I do agree though it will be hard. But isn't that the challenge?

I'm actually doing a study right now. Pulling hundred coin samples and seeing how many woodies are in each sample. I am pulling 3 hundred coin samples per year and mint mark. I might make it 5 hundred coin samples. It depends on how many raw coins I can get. For instance I only have 43 1917 D's in my sample group so far.

The Teens and Twenties are going to be easy. The Thirties a bit harder. I think the 40s are doable,but some dates are way more prevalent than others. The 50s are much harder, except for 1958, 57, and 56 in that order. I haven't started on Memorials yet, except for the odd one "found in the wild". I am guessing that those years are going to be the hardest. Those being the years that quality control was firmer.

At some point I might have to figure out how to make it a co-operative project so that I can get enough samples of the keys and semi keys. Though I have some ideas regarding sale records and what not.

What years have you found to be almost impossible? As I said I have several hundred right now; perhaps close to a thousand. Many though in low grade.
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 Posted 10/28/2013  10:11 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add just carl to your friends list
Great idea to try to make such a complete set. Woodgrained Cents are more common than people realize. Like so many other types of errors, wood grained ones could go through circuoation without anyone really noticing. These are the typical error coins not covered in many places that explain errors. Such as the Famous Red Book on pages 417 and up, latest version. Such a set would be a real challage. Might not be easy if just looking through standard rolls and piles of coins. If you frequent coin shows, start asking dealers to save any for you. Also, might want to try here.
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 Posted 10/30/2013  07:20 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add giorgio11 to your friends list
Interesting post, and I sure like that 1956-D RPM! Personally the woodgrain appearance is one I have never been fond of, though, even after 50+ years of doing Lincolns.

Best Regards,

George
VDB Coins
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 Posted 10/30/2013  10:22 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add ericmckeown to your friends list
Pretty cool demonstration. So out of the quarter million cents, did you find any major key dates?
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 Posted 10/30/2013  6:49 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add solotime to your friends list
Wow they look cool!
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 Posted 10/30/2013  8:08 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jmkendall to your friends list
I have found one 1909-S; one 1910-S;one 1914-D;one 1914-S. No 22-D;11,12,13-S;15-S or 31-S. Maybe four to five each of 1911d; 1912d;1923-S;1924-S;1925-S. One 1915-D.

What is interesting are the number of mintmarked teens. Lots of them. Lots of 20-D and S's.

Maybe a dozen 1956-D RPM-1's; 1 RPM-8; and one RPM-18. Also a dozen or so 1953-D RPM-1.

What I found interesting were that 80 percent of my 1955's could be considered "Poor mans Double Die." In fact the hard part is finding a nicely struck non Poor mans.
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