Recommend you do a google search on double dies and purchase a copy of Cherrypickers guide as you have over 400 posts and it seems you dont understand what a double die actually is . along with the various other forms like mentioned above.
(This happens at night, in the near-darkness of a Mint when the machines are left alone. They sometimes get too much lubricant and get a little feisty, and hook up their conveyors and other stuff we cannot mention on a family message board. Well, the result is called "machine doubling" in polite numismatic circles. It can affect a lot of coins and there's no cure for them -----.)
Comments
Looks like machine doubling to me.
Machine doubling
Hard to tell turn it a bit. Take a pic upside down, Maybe.
Hoard the keys.
The right top inside of the U looks like DDO, can you take picks of WE and TY
Recommend you do a google search on double dies and purchase a copy of Cherrypickers guide as you have over 400 posts and it seems you dont understand what a double die actually is
. along with the various other forms like mentioned above.
Yep, machine doubling.
(This happens at night, in the near-darkness of a Mint when the machines are left alone. They sometimes get too much lubricant and get a little feisty, and hook up their conveyors and other stuff we cannot mention on a family message board. Well, the result is called "machine doubling" in polite numismatic circles. It can affect a lot of coins and there's no cure for them -----.)
Machine doubling... This is a confusing area for new collectors. No doubt, you see something, just not the issue you are searching for. Cheers, RickO
PS: "Machine Doubling" is prohibited in Mississippi unless one is a lever and the other a wedge. There is no exception for "kinematic pairs."