Cool Morgan error coin
Wolf359
Posts: 7,656 ✭✭✭
Picked this up recently. Looks like a large planchet crack (1921-D) with a raised field. The seller actually thought it was a retained cud,
so naturally I grabbed it. Anyone know what would cause this? Impure metal mixing?
so naturally I grabbed it. Anyone know what would cause this? Impure metal mixing?
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<< <i>Picked this up recently. Looks like a large planchet crack (1921-D) with a raised field. The seller actually thought it was a retained cud,
so naturally I grabbed it. Anyone know what would cause this? Impure metal mixing?
It's a "lamination" error. A small, relatively thick flake is detaching from the coin. Such errors are, indeed, often attributed to contaminants in the alloy.
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Here is what Highfill says:
"They occur when a die actually cracks under the intense pressure of repeated strikings, and the metal from the planchet is forced into that fissure at each impact. On subsequent strikings the crack grows larger, more metal is forced into the opening, eventually broadening or lengthening it, or both. Eventually, the die breaks and a piece falls away, usually at the edge. The planchet metal forced thorugh the cavity now is large enough to form a "blob" on the coin which is commonly referred to as a "cud"."
This seems to be a unique case, in that I don't really see a lot of metal that has formed a blob. Instead, it appears to be an open crack. So, there could also have been a crack in the original planchet. Maybe a combination of all of these problems????? Interesting piece.....
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This is clearly a planchet error -- a lamination error, to be precise. Lamination errors are quite common in all solid alloy denominations, and ones this small hardly even register as a significant error. You need flakes a lot bigger than this to get a rise out of an error collector.
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42/92
the field is raised.
I have 2 other retained cuds, one is pictured in my signature line. Under a scope you can actually see the die break terminate deep
inside the denticles. Here...you cannot. The crack simply stops.
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Tom
A cracked planchet is a separation in the vertical plane that extends through the planchet and is visible on both faces. Of course, one can have an oblique split, too, but you still call it a cracked planchet if it appears on both faces. The most extreme expression of this error is the "broken planchet" or "broken coin" error, where the coin breaks into two pieces, like a broken ritz cracker.
(It seems I have junk food on my mind this morning).