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Cents - Are These Examples Of Jam Strikes?

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bobby131313's Avatar
United States
24170 Posts
 Posted 01/10/2007  12:41 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add bobby131313 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
I believe my coins may have issues done to it by a die setter at the mint. If so it was done during the minting process.


Well I couldn't possibly disagree with you more. A bored or liquid lunched die-setter at the mint deciding to smash a few coins when his boss isn't looking certainly does not qualify "during the minting process", at least not in my eyes.

Mike Byers, probably the best error guy in the world, will not buy such a coin...


Quote:
Please do not offer us the following:

More than two coins bonded together.

Caps more than ½ inch high.

U.S. Errors that were obviously and intentionally struck as error coins. No impossible mint errors.


http://www.byersnc.com/selling.html



New Member
United States
27 Posts
 Posted 01/10/2007  8:21 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jim in wmass to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Well coppercoins, your right. They bit the big one. Looking over that 1946, seeing that Lincoln on the reverse proved your point that something was was hammered onto it. Also I can see that it was struck over the wheat and not under. I thought originally that it was a planchet flaw, and gave it a second thought. All the descriptions I've read just seem to follow the rule to some points. Everything else seemed strange. These should go on an Error Shame of Fame homepage should some one build one. I don't hate you. Big hug. And thanks for the great debate.

Jim
Pillar of the Community
coppercoins's Avatar
United States
7629 Posts
 Posted 01/10/2007  9:44 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add coppercoins to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
No worries mate.
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