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Replies: 34 / Views: 2,750 |
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1231 Posts |
But if a car is of poor quality it could be unsafe and end someone's life and result in law suits. That's not true with a minted coin not a good comparison
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2376 Posts |
I doubt that there are few products produced, nor aspects of our own daily lives, that would bear perfectly, under the scrutiny of a high powered loupe.
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New Member
 United States
32 Posts |
your right if you don't care about quality you won't achieve it. The car has to be safe so they had to achieve it. So if a new boss shows up at the mint and requires high quality or hit the bricks. Then high quality will be achieved there.
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
5774 Posts |
Quote: ... So if a new boss shows up at the mint and requires high quality or hit the bricks... Noble intentions with lofty expectations might leave the boss as the only employee. So are you saying the mint employees are responsible for catching 100% of "substandard" coins produced? IMHO, one coin out of 8,151,079,000 doesn't constitute a slacker environment at the mint. Quote: ... What do get FAILURE! Just like failing to proofread doen't mean a person is illiterate. 
Words of encouragement are one of the major food groups. We need to consume them regularly to thrive and grow.
Edited by Petespockets55 01/20/2023 06:07 am
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New Member
 United States
32 Posts |
nothing is 100% but 80% is a lot better than 50%. "Aim for perfection and you will catch excellence". Vince Lombardi
Edited by JJ44 01/20/2023 06:14 am
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
10635 Posts |
All things considered I think the Mint does a pretty good job. Error coins are rare, not commonplace. 
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New Member
 United States
32 Posts |
they are pretty common everyone foaming at the mouth waiting 2023 rolls to start flowing.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2376 Posts |
We all seemingly have a foaming point
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Moderator
 United States
34410 Posts |
@jj4, you will see that I have lightly edited a couple of your posts. Passionate discourse is fine, but you must remain polite and avoid dragging in politics. This is a place for discussing numismatics.
"If you climb a good tree, you get a push." -----Ghanaian proverb
"The danger we all now face is distinguishing between what is authentic and what is performed." -----King Adz
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New Member
 United States
32 Posts |
*** Edited by Staff - Please review the rules that you agreed to when you registered. ***
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Moderator
 United States
54282 Posts |
I don't believe the mint ever strived to make 100% perfect coins. They work those dies to "death" to get the most coins possible. A coin with some die deteriation, Machine Doubling, etc. spends just as well as the first coin struck from a particular die.
Show your financial support of the Coin Community Family (click here)See my topic on Mexican Numismatic Medals (click here)
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
62064 Posts |
Keep in mind the dies are polished several times during their lives. (This makes the devices thinner) Also as the die age, they spread towards the rim direction. Thus the devices become closer. Even the master hub can show swelling and create dies that normally look like that, that are passed down on the chain of command. Note the obverses on the 1968 cents. All the obverses even proofs are showing the same affect, throwing the devices into the rim areas. So this happens as master hubs, master dies, working hubs and working dies age.  So always compare coins with the same year/mints to see if this is a common die event, or a top down through all the hubs and die issues? Using different years are not a real gauge of what happened different years. Hope this helps.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2365 Posts |
I imagine that you can notice that with the naked eye. Many inspections are done that way or with a low power loupe, if any at all. It probably just flew through with no more than a couple of seconds review - if any. Maybe they just let them go through because they wanted to or had to due to an older Hub. They know how we like "error" coins. However, that's probably not the case.
Edited by dsking 01/20/2023 12:14 pm
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Pillar of the Community
United States
573 Posts |
Quote: Henry Ford would strongly disagree with you and he invented mass production. Mass production enhances quality. FWIW, Henry Ford did not invent mass production. In the late 18th and early 19th century the British Navy was cranking out mass produced ship parts at a high rate of speed. It is generally credited as being one of the reasons they were able to out-produce Napoleon and gain and hold their numerical advantage at sea. As to mass production enhancing quality, your own complaints defeat that argument. Is there any other item more mass produced than the US Cent? 1984 alone saw more than 13,000,000 made, and yet here we are talking about their poor quality.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
756 Posts |
why would they try to be perfect? the increase in cost would be substantial. what they are making already passes muster.
across any large scale production there will be variance in the product. equipment ages. people do people stuff. this is why tolerances exist.
you can demonstrate this concept to yourself easily. try and make a dozen chocolate chip cookies that are of identical weight. try and fill 20 ziplock bags with identical weight and quantity of potato ships. the level of precision you are asking for is a waste of time and therefore money.
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Replies: 34 / Views: 2,750 |