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Valued Member
United States
455 Posts
 Posted 02/13/2011  02:28 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add thecoinczar to your friends list
It sure would be nice if this coin was real! You'd be a millionaire.
Rest in Peace
United States
1943 Posts
 Posted 02/13/2011  08:30 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add pyrbob to your friends list
Coppertop, I think what you were reading about is something we run into in a machine shop. When you use a magnetic chuck to grind parts you can transfer some of the magnetism from the chuck into the steel part you are grinding. The part then acts like a weak magnet and attracts other steel parts to it. A demagnetiser removes this magnetism so it does not stick to other steel parts. But the part itself will still always stick to a magnet. The magnetism only affects it's attraction to non magnetized steel parts.
Valued Member
United States
361 Posts
 Posted 02/13/2011  09:16 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add numismaniac to your friends list
Wasn't the last copper 43 found was discovered by a paperboy in his change? Anyone hear this tale or is it "urban legend" Bob
Pillar of the Community
United States
4846 Posts
 Posted 02/13/2011  09:49 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Adam_E to your friends list

Quote:
It sure would be nice if this coin was real! You'd be a millionaire.



why?
Bedrock of the Community
United States
11951 Posts
 Posted 02/13/2011  10:15 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add GR58 to your friends list
Either the color is off on my computer screen ...or

This just looks like a re-plated zinc cent.

What did I miss .. how did it jump to a 1943 copper.

Which is sort of funny .. at the local coin shop a customer said he was going
to bring one in this week.... I told him not to get his hopes up
Pillar of the Community
United States
809 Posts
 Posted 02/13/2011  10:58 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add lincolncentguy to your friends list
Bob...there is a story in the Coin World January 2011...a man that has all three 1943 copper cents! P-D and S mints. Very cool story.
Pillar of the Community
United States
1510 Posts
 Posted 02/13/2011  11:30 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Coinstar to your friends list
copper 43 is worth around 1.7 million

With all the press, the 1943 Copper (bronze) Pennies received, counterfeits abounded. There were copper-plated "steelies," and 1948 and 1949 pennies that were retooled into 43s by the thousands, and for almost every one of the counterfeit coins made, there was a dupe. Out of the estimated 40 bronze 1943 one-cent pieces made, there are only about 12 known to exist. That doesn't mean the other estimated 28 do not exist. Who knows? There may be another four or five yet to be found. How do you know for sure if you have a real 1943 Copper? Here are 5 steps to authentication:

1 -- The coin will not stick to a magnet.
2 -- The weight of the coin is 48 grains or 3.11 grams.
3 -- The "3" in 1943 has the same long tail as the "steelies."
4 -- The quality of the strike is exceptionally sharp especially around the rim because the bronze coin was struck with the same higher pressure as the steel pennies.
5 -- Have the coin authenticated by and independent grading service

A penny minted from the wrong metal in World War II has been sold for $1.7 million, said Laura Sperber of Legend Numismatics in Lincroft, who arranged the sale. Virtually all United States cents minted in 1943 were struck in steel rather than copper alloy, and are worth only a few cents each today, but a few coins were mistakenly made from bronze blanks left over in mint machinery. The coin was unknown to the collectors until 1979.
Retired USAF 1983-2003
Pillar of the Community
United States
3592 Posts
 Posted 02/13/2011  7:20 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Maineman750 to your friends list

Quote:
What did I miss .. how did it jump to a 1943 copper


It's not you...coppertop5150 jumped to conclusions and the thread followed
Edited by Maineman750
02/13/2011 8:29 pm
Bedrock of the Community
United States
14454 Posts
 Posted 02/13/2011  7:52 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Bryan1315 to your friends list
dern I wouldnt even of guessed it was copper colored, not sure how everyone else sees that. it looks like a replated zinc cent that is the correct color to me in the pictures. Can someone show me what makes them think this is a copper color 43 Cent?
Bedrock of the Community
United States
11951 Posts
 Posted 02/13/2011  8:42 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add GR58 to your friends list
I am wondering ... if all members here know that sometime....

1943 zinc coated/steel cents are re-plated/coated, in I think zinc.
To make them look like a better grade 1943 zinc/steel cent.

So when you hear about a re-plated 1943, it in most cases is not
talking about making them look copper.
Pillar of the Community
United States
1510 Posts
 Posted 02/13/2011  11:44 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Coinstar to your friends list
Bryan I dont think it is-- it looks funny though
Retired USAF 1983-2003
Pillar of the Community
United States
1164 Posts
 Posted 02/14/2011  12:07 am  Show Profile   Check HoosierDaddy's eBay Listings Bookmark this reply Add HoosierDaddy to your friends list
I tried posting this reply earlier. It's a shiny 1943 steel cent. It's plated I think...not with copper. I see all kinds of small bubbles with the scope. Just my first shot with a new camera. Didn't think it woul cause a fuss!
Pillar of the Community
United States
7629 Posts
 Posted 02/14/2011  11:36 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add coppercoins to your friends list
Umm, this is VERY obviously a plated coin. It's ugly as a...well, it's plated - absolutely no question about it.
Bedrock of the Community
United States
14454 Posts
 Posted 02/15/2011  12:01 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Bryan1315 to your friends list
what I always look for is the edge of the coin, if its as shiny as the Obverse and reverse then its definitely replated. The sheets were coated before the planchets were stamped out so the edge is dull on the ones that aren't replated
Bedrock of the Community
United States
17884 Posts
 Posted 02/15/2011  12:22 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Conder101 to your friends list

Quote:
copper 43 is worth around 1.7 million

Nope. The 1943-D sold for that much. The 1943 and 1943-S copper cents aren't worth nearly that much. The D went that high because unlike the other two the D is unique.
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