Cud found
jetsmell
Posts: 3 ✭
I just finished
a box of pennies. Found ten Wheaties, and a cud.
17
Comments
Welcome to the forum!
Nice find!
"Trust" in your cud..... nice find
HAPPY COLLECTING
@jetsmell welcome to the CU forum.
That is a heck of a cud!
Now that's a cud!
Excellent find for "in the wild".
Nice find!
That’s way bigger than usual.
@jetsmell....Welcome aboard....Wow.... that is one heck of a cud....Great find. Cheers, RickO
That's a good one!
Impressive cud for a newer coin. Neat find!
Way back when these were called 'atheist cents'.
And were marketed as such.
BHNC #203
Nice!
Congrats - large Cud Die Breaks like that
are not often found in rolls like that.
This
I’ve bought a couple of collections with boxes marked “freaks” as well.
In the mid-late '50's and early '60's they were called:
FIDO's
Freaks
Irregularities
Defects
Odditys
welcome to the forums and nice catch there
The coins or the collectors?
“That’s what she said. - Michael Scott” - FranklinHalfAddict
Welcome aboard. That is a nice one!
Maybe I'm being thick but don't cuds protrude from the coin's surface (due to a broken die)? This looks like there's a chunk missing.
Smitten with DBLCs.
The cud protrudes, but if the cud is large enough, the area opposite it on the other side of the coin is depressed as there was nothing on the cud side to hold the metal in place and it flowed into the void left my the broken die.
Nice that no zinc was exposed.
Yes, but that does not seem to be the case with this coin. I'm not sure what we're looking at but I'm convinced it's not a cud. Again, a cud protrudes from the coin's surface.
(Edited to add: ... unless this is an optical illusion (to my eyes) whereby what I'm seeing as a depression is actually a protrusion.)
Smitten with DBLCs.
I understand what your saying. I can see it as either, but I am leaning toward protrusion and the reverse pic helped.
Still a very interesting find and an oblique or edge pic would help @jetsmell.
Optical Illusion on your side.
It is clear as day on my screen (which is not always the case), and the reverse matches the scenario. Also, the lighting pattern on the obverse (reflection on inner edge of cud and to the right of Abe's portrait) supports a raised cud.
This coin is very reminiscent of one I found some years ago - same size but I think mine is in the lower part of the obverse.
I remember reading an article about these in the mid 1970's in COINage magazine. I wonder how many different dates and mints are out there.
Nice one!
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Cool find!
There's a site dedicated to cuds.
You may be able to find it there.
CU-1c-1984-53 in the Cuds On Coins catalog. 68 cuds for 1984 listed there.
Keeper of the VAM Catalog • Professional Coin Imaging • Prime Number Set • World Coins in Early America • British Trade Dollars • Variety Attribution
edited
BHNC #203
Nice find.
Nice find. Welcome!
Tell us a little about your interests.
Great transactions with oih82w8, JasonGaming, Moose1913.
I got my first atheist cent in 1974. I think it was a 1972 vintage. I was pumping gas at the time. It was 35.9 cents a gallon. So,for a dollar, you actually got something. It wasn't unusual for someone to pull in and buy a single dollar or two. So a guy pulls in and orders a bucks worth. He steps out of the car to watch me pump. I rack the nozzle and approach him to get paid. He reaches into his pocket and pulls out a hand full of change. He opens the hand and starts pawing around for a quarter....."twenty-five, thirty five,forty five.....he's counting. Meanwhile, I spy this cent in the group. I recognize the cud immediately......Get to the 'pennies' I'm thinking.....So he does......"Ninety five, ninety six......." Made my night !