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Replies: 27 / Views: 1,553 |
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
1770 Posts |
Thank you donnie59, Tacc, Errers and Varietys and Dearborn!!  makecents, you are right about Denver's coins, I also noticed that. Here is a thread from coop taking about Shields DDRs, that I found long ago and save it as reference. http://goccf.com/t/257897
gigi2110
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Pillar of the Community
United States
4135 Posts |
gigi you are very good at looking for errors, I am sure you will find many more.
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
94367 Posts |
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
1770 Posts |
oddguy, Thank you!  You are welcome Coinfrog!! 
gigi2110
Edited by gigi2110 12/15/2024 3:18 pm
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Pillar of the Community
United States
5193 Posts |
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
1770 Posts |
Thank you uruman!! 
gigi2110
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Moderator
 United States
188770 Posts |
Very nice! 
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
1770 Posts |
Thank you jbuck!! 
gigi2110
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
6535 Posts |
Worth noting, there are two subtypes of Class 9 doubling for single squeeze dies. The first is jolted doubling, which produces 2006-2020 nickels with lines in doors, shield cents with doubling lines next to the shield bars, double thumb Lincoln 2009 cents, and a profusion of interesting quarter DDRs like the Homestead pump in the window. The second type is. well, this kind. =P Makecents, I fail to see why a 45 degree move wouldn't produce the first disqualified initials of uniform thickness. Or for that matter, why a 90 degree horizontal Die Deterioration couldn't produce the OP coin. There is a DDD-esque Class 9.2 doubling that I haven't yet fully understood, even if I can spot it now (sometimes).
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
8767 Posts |
Brand, I misspoke earlier about just class 9 doubled dies, I've gotten so used to referring to all of these as just that. The link that gigi2110 put up of Coop's thread reminded me that some of the more extreme shield doubled dies are actually class 4 and a combo of class 4 and class 8. As for a 45-degree movement, I feel like you would get one like below, my 2023 find, and 90-degree would produce what gigi2110 has or thickness and thinness in the opposite direction of what gigi has. 
-makecents-
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
6535 Posts |
I'm not sure that I understand. Class 1-8 doubled dies are a result of multiple hubbings. How could anything except a class 9 happen on a single squeeze process?
(I will note: with the exception of hub distortion, flattening, etc. which would probably technically be categorized as hub doubling.)
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
8767 Posts |
Quote: I'm not sure that I understand. Class 1-8 doubled dies are a result of multiple hubbings. How could anything except a class 9 happen on a single squeeze process?
(I will note: with the exception of hub distortion, flattening, etc. which would probably technically be categorized as hub doubling.) I do not have a good answer for you, I'm just a flunky at best.  Here is the link that gigi posted above. Scroll through it and you will see at the bottom of the cc listing, calling out the type of doubling it is and on some of Coops pics too. LINK http://goccf.com/t/257897
-makecents-
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Replies: 27 / Views: 1,553 |