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Replies: 16 / Views: 3,473 |
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
1472 Posts |
I want to hear comments on this coin!! If you know where I got photo from please keep quiet. 
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Pillar of the Community
 Canada
1472 Posts |
Is this offstruck by two diecaps?
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Pillar of the Community
 Canada
1472 Posts |
Suppose the dollars are being struck until there is a die cap on reverse or the obverse. The operator pulls the die with cap off and saves it until there is a die cap on the opposing die and then remounts the first die cap to run again?
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Rest in Peace
1988 Posts |
Run it again...  ..Why wouldn't he/she just throw it in the recycle bin..?
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Pillar of the Community
 Canada
9865 Posts |
Quote: Why wouldn't he/she just throw it in the recycle bin..? Because playtime at the mint isn't just fun, it's profitable.
"Dipping" is not considered cleaning... -from PCGS website
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
4911 Posts |
I know where this is from and I was going to ask here to, BTW the description for it is weird, they only describe it as off center
Feel free to call me Will.
Edited by thedollarman 06/20/2014 3:14 pm
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Pillar of the Community
 Canada
1472 Posts |
Looks like it also had rotated axis. Auction over, let's hear how it happened?
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Pillar of the Community
 Canada
9865 Posts |
A bored, well experienced press operator had some time to kill. He was intimately familiar with his machine, knew how to set up to avoid errors and also knew how to create some if he wanted to. Didn't take him long to crank out two caps and a cool looking piece to sneak out after work. Today he's in a senior's home somewhere, on a fixed income, regretting the day he sold to an Ottawa dealer for twenty bucks.
"Dipping" is not considered cleaning... -from PCGS website
Edited by DBM 06/28/2014 1:19 pm
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Rest in Peace
1988 Posts |
I really wonder how many Mint employees have been approached buy collectors...friends to do some off normal strikes and slip them out the door... 
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2738 Posts |
It appears that two dollar coins were struck into an unstruck planchet, leaving a pair of mirror brockages. The coin that left the obverse brockage (Queen's bust) was off-center. From the looks of it, this would appear to be an authentic -- albeit intentional -- error.
Error coin writer and researcher.
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Pillar of the Community
 Canada
9865 Posts |
Why do collectors give credence to such fabrications?
"Dipping" is not considered cleaning... -from PCGS website
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
5324 Posts |
A lot of collectors believe that the 1966 small beads dollar was created on purpose, the 1967 double struck 50 cent and dollars are catalogued yet they were custom made due to sheer numbers, and so on. Most of the coolest error had some help in it's creation or help leaving the mint, just to add this coin was really cool in hand at the auction.
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Pillar of the Community
 Canada
9865 Posts |
But $6000 worth of cool? Ever since a dealer showed and explained a '67 double to me many years ago I've been perplexed. $100-$150 worth of cool I could understand,but....
"Dipping" is not considered cleaning... -from PCGS website
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
5324 Posts |
The final price was a little surprising, two bidders loved it, but ms65 version of the 67 double struck dollar goes for around 4000.00 as does high graded 66 small beads. Dollar errors are seldom seen.
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Moderator
 Canada
10460 Posts |
I was the underbidder, and I know the person I was bidding against was willing to "go deep", so I let it go... it is cool, because it is probably the ONLY nickel dollar with a mirror brockage that exists. Coins that heavy and hard, were unlikely to stick to the hammer or anvil die...
If you collector errors, specific to a a series (like I do with nickel dollars), then a coin like this is deeply attractive, whether it was made intentionally or not.
"Discovery follows discovery, each both raising and answering questions, each ending a long search, and each providing the new instruments for a new search." -- J. Robert OppenheimerContent of this post is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported License. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses...0/deed.en_USMy eBay store
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Pillar of the Community
 Canada
1472 Posts |
"It appears that two dollar coins were struck into an unstruck planchet, leaving a pair of mirror brockages. The coin that left the obverse brockage (Queen's bust) was off-center. From the looks of it, this would appear to be an authentic -- albeit intentional -- error"
Thanks, sounds good to me.
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Replies: 16 / Views: 3,473 |