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What Kind Of Error Is This? 1994 D Washington Quarter

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United States
10635 Posts
 Posted 05/20/2021  12:16 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add merclover to your friends list
Post mint damage ( PMD). How? Why? Maybe heat or chemical exposure. There are a million ways PMD happens. This coin did not leave the mint looking this way. The rims are a dead giveaway. Not every coin is an error coin, sorry. Keep searching!
New Member
United States
23 Posts
 Posted 05/20/2021  12:24 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Harley93 to your friends list
With the new 2021 quarters that just came out and my boyfriend getting surgery in California I asked for him to bring back a few rolls of quarters from the bank there to bring back here to PA for me and this was in the roll. I have never seen this type of error before on both sides this bad if someone went through all the bull to try and pull that off then I really dont think they would just put it back in circulation like that. and give me a second on the weight, i'll do that now
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United States
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 Posted 05/20/2021  12:33 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Harley93 to your friends list
My scale is .0 only I'm sorry to say, it used to be my packaging one but it came out to 5.7g
New Member
United States
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 Posted 05/20/2021  12:44 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Harley93 to your friends list
New Member
United States
23 Posts
 Posted 05/20/2021  12:45 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Harley93 to your friends list

What-Kind-Of-Error-Is-This?-1994-D-Washington-Quarter
Bedrock of the Community
United States
12477 Posts
 Posted 05/20/2021  04:23 am  Show Profile   Check spru's eBay Listings Bookmark this reply Add spru to your friends list
Various types of welders and torches can definitely reach temperatures that will melt/deform copper-nickel.
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
Edited by spru
05/20/2021 04:25 am
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United States
56855 Posts
 Posted 05/20/2021  04:32 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add John1 to your friends list
My vote goes to heat damage, PMD.
John1
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United States
62064 Posts
 Posted 05/20/2021  08:45 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add coop to your friends list
On coins from a house fire they develope a bubble in them:
What-Kind-Of-Error-Is-This?-1994-D-Washington-Quarter
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United States
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 Posted 05/20/2021  10:00 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Coinfrog to your friends list
Just doesn't look quite like any other heat-damaged coin I've seen.



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Canada
21663 Posts
 Posted 05/20/2021  2:29 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add JimmyD to your friends list
There are two things that can happen to a coin, an error while being struck or one of countless ways a coin
can be damaged afterwords. As that is not an error, that leaves damage, even if you don't know how it happened.
Pillar of the Community
United States
4846 Posts
 Posted 05/20/2021  3:31 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Adam_E to your friends list
Absolutely not an error. My bet is that it had some interaction with a soldering iron and some solder.

In any case, it definitely is not a mint error.
Bedrock of the Community
United States
62064 Posts
 Posted 05/20/2021  3:38 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add coop to your friends list
What the weight? Looks like someone solder it down a bunch. If so it should be over weight.
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United States
1 Posts
 Posted 04/08/2025  4:33 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Natia088 to your friends list
Hi, I may be wrong, but looking at the 4th pic down (obverse), diagonally across the coin - it almost looks like the imprint of a dime (reverse of dime)?
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United States
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