Cent on Nail "mint error" certified
Ok heres one error coin that had some help in making a cent on nail and leaving the mint as well.
A person was convicted in 1981 for making this one at West Point Mint facility
Dont know why this one got an authentic label cent on nail
A person was convicted in 1981 for making this one at West Point Mint facility
Dont know why this one got an authentic label cent on nail
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<< <i>Ok heres one error coin that had some help in making a cent on nail and leaving the mint as well.
Cent on Nail
A person was convicted in 1981 for making this one at West Point Mint facility
Dont know why this one got an authentic label >>
I think this fixes the link for you.
Looking for Top Pop Mercury Dime Varieties & High Grade Mercury Dime Toners.
Successful BST deals with mustangt and jesbroken. Now EVERYTHING is for sale.
It looks like a MS64 nail to me.
Enjoyed numismatic conversations with Eric P. Newman, Dave Akers, Jules Reiver, David Davis, Russ Logan, John McCloskey, Kirk Gorman, W. David Perkins...
He asked the press operator what it was for, and the press operator said that when the feed tube clogged he used the nail to clear the feed tube, which had a slot down the side for this very purpose!
So, although a cent strike on a nail is very unlikely, there does exist the chance that at least one such strike was a legitimate random error.
TD
now looking through that inventory was fun!
some of it mangled, none of it trash, imo.
.
In 1977, a half-dozen (Cent) pieces appeared at a large
New York coin show - from the West Point Depository.
I bought them all - they're now slowly appearing on the
market.
Also, around 2000/2001, a few pieces on cents and dimes
came out of the Philadelphia Mint.
As far as I know, only one of any of these has a date -
a Nail with just the '1977' date showing on the nail.
NGC is certifying them too.
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
strike them on screws, not nails....
This way, they'll finally be able to directly
give us the message they've been indirectly
giving us for over 10 years - SCREW YOU Americans!
<< <i>Andy, if the Chinese counterfeit 'em, they'll
strike them on screws, not nails....
This way, they'll finally be able to directly
give us the message they've been indirectly
giving us for over 10 years - SCREW YOU Americans! >>
<< <i>Ok heres one error coin that had some help in making a cent on nail and leaving the mint as well.
A person was convicted in 1981 for making this one at West Point Mint facility
Dont know why this one got an authentic label cent on nail >>
Good Question!
After all, the coin is counterfeit and an unauthorized issue. No motto, no date, no UNITED STATES OF AMERICA.
The name is LEE!
<< <i>Graded too. >>
Thank Goodness it's an MS63!!
The name is LEE!
<< <i>Andy, if the Chinese counterfeit 'em, they'll
strike them on screws, not nails....
This way, they'll finally be able to directly
give us the message they've been indirectly
giving us for over 10 years - SCREW YOU Americans! >>
Where's the LIKE Button??
The name is LEE!
<< <i>Andy, if the Chinese counterfeit 'em, they'll
strike them on screws, not nails....
This way, they'll finally be able to directly
give us the message they've been indirectly
giving us for over 10 years - SCREW YOU Americans! >>
lmao, ayup
I sold my coin a couple of years after that post to someone who submitted it to PCGS without any supporting documentation or pictures, and they sent it back in a body bag as post mint damage. I took a return from him and sold it raw to another collector on the boards. I wold love to know if he ever tried to get it into PCGS plastic again, between the photos and expert opinions on that thread I think there was enough evidence there to get it holdered.
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
If it was made from authentic dies at a US Mint, you can't possibly call it a counterfeit. Unauthorized, most probably, but not counterfeit.
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
FWIW, my mentor in errors, Ed Fleischmann of Coin World's Collectors Clearinghouse, told me a story about how, not long after the first cents on nails appeared among great skepticism, he happened to be on the floor of one of the Mints (probably Denver during an ANA Summer Seminar tour but I can't swear to that) and saw a thin nail sitting on a coining press!
He asked the press operator what it was for, and the press operator said that when the feed tube clogged he used the nail to clear the feed tube, which had a slot down the side for this very purpose!
So, although a cent strike on a nail is very unlikely, there does exist the chance that at least one such strike was a legitimate random error.
TD
-------------------------
Confucius say: "A journey of a thousand miles, contains at least four major highway projects and one detour!"
Enjoyed numismatic conversations with Eric P. Newman, Dave Akers, Jules Reiver, David Davis, Russ Logan, John McCloskey, Kirk Gorman, W. David Perkins...
<< <i>I sold another PCGS Nail at the ANA last month.
In 1977, a half-dozen (Cent) pieces appeared at a large
New York coin show - from the West Point Depository.
I bought them all - they're now slowly appearing on the
market.
Also, around 2000/2001, a few pieces on cents and dimes
came out of the Philadelphia Mint.
As far as I know, only one of any of these has a date -
a Nail with just the '1977' date showing on the nail.
NGC is certifying them too. >>
So the nails are "Point"ed???
"Everything is on its way to somewhere. Everything." - George Malley, Phenomenon
http://www.american-legacy-coins.com
Whoever is careless with the truth in small matters cannot be trusted with important matters.
Jon knows his errors, so I can't imagine the price being too far off reality
Ike Specialist
Finest Toned Ike I've Ever Seen, been looking since 1986
<< <i>That's pretty cool, but I think PCGS got it wrong.
It looks like a MS64 nail to me. >>
Good eye,
mentioned earlier in this thread, sold for $8,000,
so Jon's asking price of $9K is within the range of
'last trade'.
Priceless after DNA results prove it belonged to a Press Operator
ttt
Is this the thread you were searching for? If so, then we are talking about a cent on a nail.
This is way cool.
The thread I posted is about a dime on a nail......I feel it deserves its own space.
See http://www.doubledimes.com for a free online reference for US twenty-cent pieces
I sold another PCGS Nail at the ANA last month.
In 1977, a half-dozen (Cent) pieces appeared at a large
New York coin show - from the West Point Depository.
I bought them all - they're now slowly appearing on the
market.
Also, around 2000/2001, a few pieces on cents and dimes
came out of the Philadelphia Mint.
As far as I know, only one of any of these has a date -
a Nail with just the '1977' date showing on the nail.
NGC is certifying them too.
Darn tourists!
Leo
The more qualities observed in a coin, the more desirable that coin becomes!
My Jefferson Nickel Collection
``https://ebay.us/m/KxolR5
is hot...
That's pretty cool, but I think PCGS got it wrong.
It looks like a MS64 nail to me.
I think they nailed it.
Sorry, I didn't look further to find other punsters!
How about a Trade Dollar struck on a pair of chopsticks?