Who here is into error coins?
I'm going to take a break from seated halves for a while. I seem to be getting interested in error coins. What are some books that you think are worthwile to check out?
Roosevelt dime errors seem pretty neat to me. I think that's where I want to collect in. I placed an order today with Fred Weinberg. I bought a couple of different Roosevelt dime errors from him.
How do you collect your coin errors? I would like to hear some different ways that you guys and gals collect. Thanks.
Roosevelt dime errors seem pretty neat to me. I think that's where I want to collect in. I placed an order today with Fred Weinberg. I bought a couple of different Roosevelt dime errors from him.
How do you collect your coin errors? I would like to hear some different ways that you guys and gals collect. Thanks.
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``https://ebay.us/m/KxolR5
If you decide to wade into the murly waters of eBay, instead of sticking with better known dealers, read and learn as much as you can first. The eBay Error Coin category is overrun with crap, probably half of the stuff offered there is damaged goods, extremely minor and barely collectible, or flat-out fake. My PM is always on if you have questions about any particular coin.
As far as how to collect, you can collect different error types within one series, or one particular error type across all series, or just stuff that you think looks cool, there's no right way to do it. Here are the main collections I have in progress: Lincoln Cent incomplete planchets (clips) by date/mintmark, a U.S. type set of clips, off-center clad dimes by date/mintmark, and clips on foreign coins, tokens, or whatever.
If you like Roosies in particular, you can try to find different error types (the books will be great for explaining just how many there are) all in that series. I know someone who did that with Jefferson nickels and his error collection is breathtaking. If you decide to do a date set, consider finding one error of any type for every date. Off-center or clipped date sets are possible but can get prohibitively expensive if you go back and include the silver issues (especially true for off-centers, not so much for clips).
Whatever you do, make sure to have fun doing it.
Sean Reynolds
"Keep in mind that most of what passes as numismatic information is no more than tested opinion at best, and marketing blather at worst. However, I try to choose my words carefully, since I know that you guys are always watching." - Joe O'Connor
I am almost finished!
I started it out on the PCGS Registry, but....
Since no one recognizes Ike Peg-Leg varieties (yet,...hint, hint) I had to transfer it over to the
NGC Signature Set Registry under Mint Errors.....You can kind of customize your set to include whatever you want.
***I sure wish PCGS had something like that!***Hint, Hint!
Errors are NEAT and fun to collect! You might be better off buying them already slabbed as $40 a pop is pretty
steep for a lot of errors....especially in dimes. Most of your errors would probably cost less that getting them
slabbed.
I have bought several of my errors from Fred as well, and he is a great guy to work with. You got off to a great
start by getting them from him!
Good Luck with your errors and enjoy the heck out of them.
Happy Hunting!
Brian
I LOVE
So, the advice I would give is to specialize, as narrowly as you can. Knowledge is the admitted key to power, and the more knowledge you own, the less you're dependant on someone else's (TPG's) potentially-mistaken evaluation. The real opportunity of Ebay is as a venue for those who are unaware of what they're selling, and the real rewards for you come from snagging a previously-unattributed coin.
One of the nice things about an error collector is many of them are so easy to spot. It's not as bad as even trying to see faded mint marks or dates. I love the ones with missing numbers or dates. I used to watch for slight offsets but they are so common I switched to more extensive errors like DD's, RPM's, etc. Doubling on the rims is also to common and after a few hundred of those they get boring.
If you want to spend the money on a great book that lists all kind of errors, check out Looking Through Lincolns by that coppercoins guy. I've got his book and it really list lots of errors.
<< <i>The Error Coin Encyclopedia (4th edition), written by Fred and Arnie Margolis, is an excellent primer text to get you started. Also good is Alan Herbert's Official Price Guide to U.S. Mint Errors (6th edition). >>
Another good overview is provided by James Wiles's "Minting Varieties and Errors". It's an ANA "short course" companion and is available on the ANA website (www.money.org).
There are helpful on-line error groups such as the one I host, the Error Coin Information Exchange (http://groups.yahoo.com/group/errorcoininformationexchange/). Visit the message board, photo gallery, links section, and files section. Download my 17-page error/variety checklist. Visit Mint Error News (www.minterrornews.com) for dowloadable back issues. Visit Ken Potter's website for helpful articles.
As far as eBay goes, you can get a lot of nice bargains there. But you have to know what you're doing, or seek out someone who does.
-- Mike Diamond
I just selected a series to work on by date and mint mark and after working on it for years, I am only about 70% done.
San Diego, CA
You might want to try http://groups.yahoo.com/group/errorworld1/ it is the BEST error coin club on the internet!!!!
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/errorworld1/
<< <i>I'm a doubled die kinda guy. >>
Amazing, not one slam. . .er. . .constructive criticism for describing the double die as an error.
Semper ubi sub ubi
I keep my best ones in the back of an #8100 Dansco Album with that penny collection. I have two extra pages just for errors and varieties.
That could be something you might want to think about doing with your dimes. Most of the coins I find make their way into a big jar with a wide mouth. I also put some in a 2x2 and keep in a box. I have had some graded by PCGS and sold on eBay.
The reason I chose pennies is that there seems to be a lot more varieties of pennies than anything else. And pennies are so easy to find rolls of. They are cheap - I get them for 50¢ per roll where I shop for pennies: at the bank.
I also collect Kennedy Halves. There are a lot of Kennedy doubled dies you can collect - a lot! I have a few of them in the back of my Dansco Kennedy Album on an extra page. I can usually buy a blank page for most Dansco ALbums at any of the local coin shops around here. They shouldn't be too hard for you to find where you're at providing you are close to a coin shop or can order supplies online.
Carl offered some good advice in that a good reference book can be helpful. I have Chuck Daughtrey's(Coppercoin) book, Looking Through Lincoln Cents as well as The Cherrypicker's Guide and The Kennedy Half Dollar Book by James Wiles. These keep me quite busy and besides my type collection, I don't need much else to keep my collecting heart satisfied.
I go through enough boxes of pennies that sometimes I can afford to sell off extra rolls Sundays on ebay. I have already searched some of the rolls in a box and can tell prospective bidders exactly what I have found and the quality of the coins that I have found in those rolls. Therefor they should find a similar makeup of cents in their rolls. I've recently sold 10-roll lots for as much as $30. There are quite a few of us out there who like looking through cents and some can't find these rolls locally so they buy from eBay. I sold some to a nice guy who bought them to put back for his grandchild to go through when he grows up. Maybe someday my grandchildren and his will communicate with each other on the internet and maybe trade errors and varieties. I have traded a few here and there myself.
Good luck.
My EBay Store/Auctions
I just bought the Official Price Guide to Mint Errors by Author: Alan Herbert from Brent-krueger to get me started.
<< <i>Thanks for the helpful links and for sharing your knowledge on errors.
I just bought the Official Price Guide to Mint Errors by Author: Alan Herbert from Brent-krueger to get me started.
I have that. IMHO thats about the most worthless "price guide" I've ever seen.
I think that Alan Herbert's book is the best for starters. It describes how the error occurs pretty well.
If you want to buy errors on ebay, it's best to look both in the error section, and out of the error section.
A few tips: Always remember that if a coin has a reversed image of a "second strike", then it is very likely that it is a fake. Offmetals on a larger planchet (ie dime on a cent planchet) are not possible on U.S. coins.
And finally, I think that errors are fun because all of them are unique. Whether if it's an off-centered memorial cent, or a capped-die two cent piece, they are always unique. You will never find another.
San Diego, CA
<< <i>Hi Offmetal, your icon does not look like an off metal, you need one of this.
Ex-Fred Weinberg
I'll have to find an icon
It will be EX-me in a couple of months.
San Diego, CA
I'll have to upload it next month
Were you the one who won it from Mr. Weinberg a few months back?
I remembered it carried a hefty pricetag
Although I may be wrong
Ben
Sure wish I had the mated cent!!!!!!!!
<< <i>How about this one??
Sure wish I had the mated cent!!!!!!!!
Wow!! Beautiful!!
A flip-over double strucked double denomination with a uniface 2nd strike
San Diego, CA
San Diego, CA
<< <i>How about this washer? not mine.
Interesting
and they're cold.
I don't want nobody to shoot me in the foxhole."
Mary
Best Franklin Website
<< <i>Started collecting errors in 1972 and gave 'em up 10 years later, then started again. Hands down, Fred is THE man (I remember him as a mere 'lad'). Knowledgable and genuine and trustworthy are characteristics not commonly found together, Fred Weinberg's got 'em. Years ago 'Lonesome' John Devine was the go-to guy, a very special man who sadly seems to have slipped into oblivion. Fred, do you know what became of John? >>
Lonesome John made a surprise appearance at a recent ANA convention, I saw a picture of him next to Fred in the CONECA club magazine ErrorScope. I believe he's retired and touring the country in an RV with his wife.
Your question reminded me of another great (and reliable) source of error coins, Jim's Coins, which was formerly known as Len's Coin & Stamp. Len Roosmalen is semi-retired, Jim Essense now owns his business and continues to run a bimonthly error coin auction. Before Len ran his own auctions, he was the club auctioneer for CONECA. You would probably have a hard time finding a high-end error coin that John or Len hadn't handled at some point over the last 30 years.
Sean Reynolds
"Keep in mind that most of what passes as numismatic information is no more than tested opinion at best, and marketing blather at worst. However, I try to choose my words carefully, since I know that you guys are always watching." - Joe O'Connor