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Replies: 16 / Views: 3,094 |
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Valued Member
United States
261 Posts |
How many different JFK coins were released in 2014?
By my count it is 13.
Business strikes 2 Uncirc set clad 2 High relief clad 2 proof clad 1 proof silv 1 50th silv set 4 gold 1
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Bedrock of the Community
 United States
12809 Posts |
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Moderator
 United States
187582 Posts |
Thirteen is correct, assuming the mint set coins are different from the bagged and rolled ones.
The links above are an appropriate read, by the way.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
5197 Posts |
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Bedrock of the Community
 United States
12809 Posts |
Nice try for a 14th, jack! 
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Moderator
 United States
187582 Posts |
Nice counterstamp. 
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Bedrock of the Community
 United States
12809 Posts |
Does the term "counterstamp" apply to an example as drastic as this?
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Bedrock of the Community
 United States
12809 Posts |
Regardless, it makes me smile to think of the 2014 Kennedy issues and all the related fuss. What a year. Personally I love all the 2014 issues. 4, 8, 9, 11, 13 or however you want to fill your album, 2014 was a great year for the Kennedy half!
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1208 Posts |
At this point, since ALL JFKs are "collector coins" and NIFC, I doubt very seriously that the mint produces the "business strikes" and the "mint set" coins any different. IMO, those are one and the same, until someone shows me proof otherwise. Your opinion may be more easily swayed.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
613 Posts |
I'm still going with 13. :-)
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1781 Posts |
ratio411, In 1998, while I was on a tour of the Philadelphia Mint floor, a Mint spokesman told me that coins that go into the Mint Sets are from smaller runs (for the cent it was the first 100-thousand to 200-thousand coins from a die that would eventually strike 1.5 to 2 million coins. He also stated that they were struck with a "little higher tonnage." If things were the same last year we could presumably expect to see the Kennedy halves in Mint Sets struck a little better and be in relatively early die state. This would change nothing else so they'd still be indistinguishable from better struck coins from out of the rolls and bags sold by the Mint -- if things stayed the same as they were in 1998.
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Moderator
 United States
187582 Posts |
Quote: Does the term "counterstamp" apply to an example as drastic as this? In my opinion, sure, as long as you can still tell what the coin is.
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Moderator
 United States
187582 Posts |
Quote: until someone shows me proof otherwise. Your opinion may be more easily swayed. My observations from viewing the US Mint site... They explicitly state on the Mint Set page that " U.S. Mint uncirculated coins are struck on special presses using greater force than what is used for circulating coins, producing a sharp, intricately detailed image. The coins are sealed in blisters and displayed in folders." Not only is this not mentioned on the page for Kennedy half dollar Bags, they state that they " Contains 200 Coins that have never been placed into circulation," which could imply that they were made to business strike standards. I think the page fro Kennedy half dollar Rolls removes all doubt. It states that " Each 2015 Kennedy half dollar Two-Roll Set contains 40 circulating quality coins." Surely the bags do not get better coins than the rolls.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1208 Posts |
JBUCK... Yeah, I realized the mint claims they take a little more care, as if we could tell, with the uncirculated set coins. You kinda made my point though, with the first post, when you said the mint set coins are identical in every way, and even use the exact dies that get used for circs, but we might expect them to show a sharper strike.
I stand by the idea that if I gave you, or anyone, one of each, you couldn't tell them apart in hand if not packaged/labeled.
It's just not a big enough difference to base 2 more varieties on. You will have some mint set coins that just simply didn't benefit from those small steps in the process, and just the same, you will have new dies and really sharp strikes happen now and again when they are minting the rolled coins.
It's not a different mint mark, metal composition, surface treatment, or planchet preparation. The dies aren't even different! The dies that strike the uncs are then used to strike the rolled coins. Just doesn't make the cut IMO.
The non-mint mark "S" mint ASEs that people are paying extra to get slabbed are a joke IMO, and even they have more standing to be a different hole in the album than these 2 halves.
Edit: Sorry JBUCK, I accidentally confused some of KOINPRO's post with yours.
Edited by ratio411 05/11/2015 2:06 pm
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1208 Posts |
Don't apply any kind of "tone" or "attitude" to my post... That probably read as arguementative or such, but don't take it that way. LoL
I am just playing devil's advocate with my opinion.
I know anyone can build a collection any way they like, and the more coins in someone's album for one year is that much more impressive. Even I can admit that.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1208 Posts |
I just realized that this is going to be argued forever. As long as there are at least 2 people collecting coins, this will be a point of contention. LoL 300 years from now, 2 JFK collectors will compare their sets, and argue over who has the correct quantity!
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Replies: 16 / Views: 3,094 |