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Is This Wear Normal?

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 Posted 10/05/2019  12:49 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add moxking to your friends list
I'd rub out the scratch using it as a pocket piece, making sure the date remains clear, and I think you could get it down to P-01.
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 Posted 10/05/2019  12:56 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add merclover to your friends list
You know, a take back my last statement... looking up values for a 1900 Liberty nickel, it *might* have a value of about a $1 US. At least the date is readable. Highest and best value: give it to a child to perhaps encourage an interest in coin collecting.
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 Posted 10/05/2019  02:14 am  Show Profile   Check spru's eBay Listings Bookmark this reply Add spru to your friends list
My gut says that the coin shows more than normal circulation wear. Unfortunately, those scratches on the obverse really kill it. Overall, it has very little value in my opinion.
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 Posted 10/05/2019  08:02 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add joecoin to your friends list
I think it's just circulation wear. It might have "circulated" through a lot of slot machines.
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 Posted 10/05/2019  08:58 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add thq to your friends list
Nice. The result of rubbing two nickels together. In 1900 it bought a loaf of bread.

"Two minutes ago I would have sold my chances for a tired dime." Fred Astaire
Edited by thq
10/05/2019 09:00 am
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 Posted 10/05/2019  09:03 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add kanga to your friends list
If it weren't for the "X" on the obverse I bet there would have been a HUGE scramble for it by the low end collectors.
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 Posted 10/05/2019  09:56 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Coinfrog to your friends list
Might still be desirable to them.



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 Posted 10/05/2019  10:17 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Keith67 to your friends list
Looks like wear to me
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 Posted 10/05/2019  10:21 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add sel_69l to your friends list
No.
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 Posted 10/05/2019  3:23 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add T-BOP to your friends list
PO-01 Details , lowball heaven ,just smooth out the obverse scratches and as mentioned stay away from that date .
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 Posted 10/05/2019  10:09 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add fortcollins to your friends list


When I was a youngster in the early 1960s, Liberty nickels still showed up in change at our family's hardware store. Many of them looks pretty much like this one. My sister and I became skilled at translating the "Morse Code" of what was left of the tops of the dates, and many of those coins were the high mintage 1900-1912 coins. One thought to ponder. In the early 1960s, those coins were barely 50 years old. Quarters today circulate as heavily as nickels in the early 1900s, and the early clad quarters are as old now as those Liberty nickels were in the 1960s, yet are in much better shape. Strike quality and planchet porosity (alloy quality) are at least two of the factors distinguishing the two.
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 Posted 10/06/2019  03:13 am  Show Profile   Check spru's eBay Listings Bookmark this reply Add spru to your friends list

Quote:
Strike quality and planchet porosity (alloy quality) are at least two of the factors distinguishing the two.


And relative rate of circulation. It takes a lot of normal circulation for a CuNi coin to end up like that. Also, good luck getting those scratches out.
In Memory of Crazyb0 12-26-1951 to 7-27-2020
In Memory of Tootallious 3-31-1964 to 4-15-2020
In Memory of T-BOP 10-12-1949 to 1-19-2024
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 Posted 10/06/2019  09:34 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add just carl to your friends list

Can you imagine all the places that coin has been.
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 Posted 10/07/2019  11:32 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add thq to your friends list
In the midst of doing this, it makes it easier to use a large smooth rimless coin to wear against. I'm using a French 2 sol made of unknown alloy bronze.

The bur on the nickel's reverse is interesting, since my coin has several. For a few hours they caught on the rubbing coin's surface, but are now burnished and slide easily. They're not going away.

It would take years of this to remove something as deep as the x on the nickel's obverse.
"Two minutes ago I would have sold my chances for a tired dime." Fred Astaire
Edited by thq
10/07/2019 11:33 am
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 Posted 10/07/2019  4:15 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Andrew99 to your friends list
I sell normal AG-VG Lib Nickels for $1 ea. This one is maybe worth a dime, if you can sell it. I'd spend it and put it into circulation.
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