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Presentation On Modern Doubled Dies

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 Posted Yesterday   8:48 pm Show Profile   Bookmark this topic Add 1910S_1C to your friends list Get a Link to this Message Number of Subscribers
I am preparing the linked presentation on modern doubled dies to show to my local coin club during next month's meeting:

https://docs.google.com/presentatio...?usp=sharing

What I've currently put together is just a draft, and I'm soliciting the opinions of whoever here is willing to share them on how it can be improved. Suggestions for how I might be able to flesh it out or fine-tune what is already present are more than welcome.

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Tanman2001's Avatar
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4402 Posts
 Posted Yesterday   9:43 pm  Show Profile   Check Tanman2001's eBay Listings Bookmark this reply Add Tanman2001 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
You might find CONECA's division of Class IX into Type 1 and Type 2 helpful in explaining the two main types of single-squeeze doubling, if you haven't referenced that already: https://conecaonline.org/the-9-clas...oubled-dies/

For the start-date of the single-squeeze era, people common say 1996/7 as the start since Denver used single-squeeze hubs when their die shop opened in 1996 and Philadelphia fully switched over the following year, 1997. http://varietyvista.com/25%20What%2...%20Dates.htm (Though there is an argument that, since single-squeeze hubbing was first developed around 1986 and testing with production dies began around that time, that 1986-1995 single squeeze doubled dies could exist if the test dies were put into production).

For the 2022-present 'explosion' there have been some Class II+VI doubled dies found, which logically should not be possible with single-squeeze hubbing. See 2023-P 25c EK VDDR-001, 2023-P 5c WDDO-002, and others. I have not yet heard a good explanation for these, so there's potentially more going on than just experimentation with die curvature.
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Brandmeister's Avatar
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 Posted Yesterday   10:18 pm  Show Profile   Check Brandmeister's eBay Listings Bookmark this reply Add Brandmeister to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Two suggestions from me:

1. I am not sure the term struck is correct for hubs making dies. Manufactured might be a better word. I think it's a much slower, much higher pressure procedure than striking a coin.

2. Is the quarter DDO from your personal collection? I think an example like the 1935 or 1916 Buffalo nickel doubled dies would be more dramatic.
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Tanman2001's Avatar
United States
4402 Posts
 Posted Yesterday   10:23 pm  Show Profile   Check Tanman2001's eBay Listings Bookmark this reply Add Tanman2001 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
Manufactured might be a better word.


Hmm, I didn't notice that before. I think 'hubbed' is commonly used for that.
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