Hey Dog....look again, it is a struck cent on a struck dime making it an 11 cent piece. True, I do not see the dime date though. Still a very nice coin.
<< As you were, there's ONE DIME spelled upside down & backward making it a double denomination! >> That implies that I didn't see the denomination designation when I made my initial post. There not exceedingly rare but you don't find 1 in every mint sack like you do broadstrucks, clips & off centers etc. They are produced by coins getting stuck in parts of the machinery & equipment and later getting unstuck and mixed in with other denomination planchets on the way to the presses.
Change that we can believe in is that change which is 90% silver.
Comments
Byron
My first YOU SUCK on May 6 2005
Does anyone know, how common is this type of error?
It seems like someone almost has to purposefully "produce" this type of error. But, I don't know.
Are you implying double denomination coins are common errors?
That implies that I didn't see the denomination designation when I made my initial post.
There not exceedingly rare but you don't find 1 in every mint sack like you do broadstrucks, clips & off centers etc. They are produced by coins getting stuck in parts of the machinery & equipment and later getting unstuck and mixed in with other denomination planchets on the way to the presses.
I didn't understand where you were refering to with your comment.
Thanks for the rareity info.