It will weigh the same, or .1 or .2 of a gram heavier
than a normal clad quarter.
Retired Collector & Dealer in Major Mint Error Coins & Currency since the 1960's.Co-Author of Whitman's "100 Greatest U.S. Mint Error Coins", and the Error Coin Encyclopedia, Vols., III & IV. Retired Authenticator for Major Mint Errors for PCGS. A 50+ Year PNG Member.A full-time numismatist since 1972, retired in 2022.
5.67 is normal, so the extra weight
is the plating, as mentioned.
Retired Collector & Dealer in Major Mint Error Coins & Currency since the 1960's.Co-Author of Whitman's "100 Greatest U.S. Mint Error Coins", and the Error Coin Encyclopedia, Vols., III & IV. Retired Authenticator for Major Mint Errors for PCGS. A 50+ Year PNG Member.A full-time numismatist since 1972, retired in 2022.
Fred’s gotta be right. Thank you. I legitimately believe I will never find a true error in circulation. I’m like 0/100 on these. It’s always PMD or some sort of tv promo plating. BLAH.
There were several telemarketers selling plated sets.
Numismatist. 50 year member ANA. Winner of four ANA Heath Literary Awards; three Wayte and Olga Raymond Literary Awards; Numismatist of the Year Award 2009, and Lifetime Achievement Award 2020. Winner numerous NLG Literary Awards.
@Watchbelieve said:
I legitimately believe I will never find a true error in circulation.
You're right, so just give up.
I don't know how you are searching, but unless you work at a convenience store or someplace similar you probably won't see enough coins to generate the necessary volume to increase your odds to the level they need to be.
Best bet is to buy boxes of cents and nickels. With cents, search for known doubled dies, and keep your eyes open for the one off errors like clips, plating errors, or something more extreme. With nickels you can focus on dramatic errors and the couple known DDs, and the occasional war nickel or buffalo nickel.
You can do dimes and quarters, of course, but that gets more expensive.
I have searched 10s of thousands of nickels and have found dozens of silver war nickels and buffalos, and less than a handful of extremely minor cuds and clips. But then I found a 2016 nickel struck over a 2015 nickel, which makes up for a lifetime of roll searching.
Volume, and being able to recognize an error when you see it. That will put you in a good position to find something.
@Watchbelieve said:
Fred’s gotta be right. Thank you. I legitimately believe I will never find a true error in circulation. I’m like 0/100 on these. It’s always PMD or some sort of tv promo plating. BLAH.
They are there. Just have to recognize it when you see it... and have a few false hopes along the way!
By the way, that coin might have come from me. I dumped a bunch of silver, platinum and gold plated quarters into a coinstar. When it's only a random coin or even a complete set with a bad plating job, it's just not worth trying to sell them.
I do have a complete set of gold-plated quarters at the moment if you want to find a bunch of errors in your mail.
I legitimately believe I will never find a true error in circulation.
That's why most of us don't bother looking. You will almost never find a major error as they rarely get into circulation. You have to really love minor cuds or barely visible clips or grease-filled letters to even bother looking.
The kind of "errors" you might find are the ones that are very hard to see for a novice. Struck with proof dies, for example, where the only difference is letter thickness or something like that. And the type of minor errors you are likely to find have almost no retail value.
But, it is free to look and if you find it fun, go ahead.
@jmlanzaf said:
By the way, that coin might have come from me. I dumped a bunch of silver, platinum and gold plated quarters into a coinstar. When it's only a random coin or even a complete set with a bad plating job, it's just not worth trying to sell them.
I do have a complete set of gold-plated quarters at the moment if you want to find a bunch of errors in your mail.
When we bought them in at the coin shop we paid face value and gave them out in the cash register.
Numismatist. 50 year member ANA. Winner of four ANA Heath Literary Awards; three Wayte and Olga Raymond Literary Awards; Numismatist of the Year Award 2009, and Lifetime Achievement Award 2020. Winner numerous NLG Literary Awards.
I assume that most major errors these days are discovered at the huge coin processors who get the huge containers of coins mint. As I understand it, they agree to return any error they find to the mint, but I doubt that happens.
I've found some pretty impressive errors over the years including a couple with quite a bit of wear. f course now that the counting houses are removing errors and returning them to the mint and people are watching their change more closely these are getting harder and harder to find.
Until the end of the last century it seemed no one ever even glanced at their change.
It's been reported that the outfits that plated these quarters often wouldn't even spring for a few cents worth of platinum for their "platinum plated coins". So this could be "platinum" plated instead of silver or platinum plated.
In any case it's not worth the time and effort to determine its nature because it will be plated almost certainly.
Where is Occam's Razor when we need it? oh here it is,
Occam's Razor
When we are faced with more than one hypothesis that explains the data equally well, we choose the simpler explanation.
A hairy creature in the woods is more likely a bear than Bigfoot.
An unknown object in the sky is more likely a balloon than a flying saucer.
When you hear hoof beats, think of horses not zebras.
“I believe in intuitions and inspirations. I sometimes feel that I am right. I do not know that I am. When two expeditions of scientists, financed by the Royal Academy, went forth to test my theory of relativity, I was convinced that their conclusions would tally with my hypothesis. I was not surprised when the eclipse of May 29, 1919, confirmed my intuitions. I would have been surprised if I had been wrong.”
“Then you trust more to your imagination than to your knowledge?”
“I am enough of the artist to draw freely upon my imagination. Imagination is more important than knowledge. Knowledge is limited. Imagination encircles the world.”
Albert Einstein- quoted in Saturday Evening Post interview (1929)
Please remember that it is Democrats who lack a sense of humor. Republicans should feel free to laugh, even at one of their own.
Agreed, mostly.
Now imagine if that same quip was made about the previous "presidente".
Since this is a coin forum, the OP is a plated piece worth twenty five cents that will be rejected by Coinstar.
Funny you should mention the Coinstar. I have mixed results with plated coins in the Coinstar. I always use the same one, sometimes it takes them, sometimes it doesn't.
Please remember that it is Democrats who lack a sense of humor. Republicans should feel free to laugh, even at one of their own.
Agreed, mostly.
Now imagine if that same quip was made about the previous "presidente".
Since this is a coin forum, the OP is a plated piece worth twenty five cents that will be rejected by Coinstar.
Remember when the previous presidents handicap was classified? Even Michael Jordan called him a hack, even with all his practice.
The original quote might be funny so some, but after hearing about the White House Correspondents Dinner debacle last night, I am not in a "funny" mood today.
So I will simply mention that I silver plated dozens and dozens of state quarters back in the day - then spent them. They sure were purdy.
“In matters of style, swim with the current; in matters of principle, stand like a rock." - Thomas Jefferson
Comments
It was.
Weigh it, it's not silver.
Definitely weigh it.... sometimes the minting process will 'smear' the clad material over the internal copper.
Cheers, RickO
If you drop it, does it have a higher pitched ring than a clad quarter?
It's plated.
It will weigh the same, or .1 or .2 of a gram heavier
than a normal clad quarter.
My gut was plating, too.
My YouTube Channel
5.74 grams
5.67 is normal, so the extra weight
is the plating, as mentioned.
Traditional 90% silver quarter is 6.25 grams.
I think there was some company that was plating state quarters with platinum to create some sort of collectable.
If course, on occassion I have been known to take a silver Sharpie to the edge of a clad quarter.
I have seen these before, most likely it's in the plating. But weigh it as mentioned above to be sure.
Fred’s gotta be right. Thank you. I legitimately believe I will never find a true error in circulation. I’m like 0/100 on these. It’s always PMD or some sort of tv promo plating. BLAH.
There were several telemarketers selling plated sets.
Nice find....if authentic
Successful transactions with : MICHAELDIXON, Manorcourtman, Bochiman, bolivarshagnasty, AUandAG, onlyroosies, chumley, Weiss, jdimmick, BAJJERFAN, gene1978, TJM965, Smittys, GRANDAM, JTHawaii, mainejoe, softparade, derryb, Ricko
Bad transactions with : nobody to date
You're right, so just give up.
I don't know how you are searching, but unless you work at a convenience store or someplace similar you probably won't see enough coins to generate the necessary volume to increase your odds to the level they need to be.
Best bet is to buy boxes of cents and nickels. With cents, search for known doubled dies, and keep your eyes open for the one off errors like clips, plating errors, or something more extreme. With nickels you can focus on dramatic errors and the couple known DDs, and the occasional war nickel or buffalo nickel.
You can do dimes and quarters, of course, but that gets more expensive.
I have searched 10s of thousands of nickels and have found dozens of silver war nickels and buffalos, and less than a handful of extremely minor cuds and clips. But then I found a 2016 nickel struck over a 2015 nickel, which makes up for a lifetime of roll searching.
Volume, and being able to recognize an error when you see it. That will put you in a good position to find something.
They are there. Just have to recognize it when you see it... and have a few false hopes along the way!
POssibly a wrong medal panchet from a foreign country or a silver proof 2003 blank that got mixed in with 2004 coins.
I wonder if it is platinum?
https://ebay.com/itm/2004-UNITED-STATES-50-STATE-QUARTERS-PLATINUM-MINT-5-COIN-SET-UNC-WITH-COA/273170421756?epid=1132698473&hash=item3f9a39d7fc:g:4OYAAOSwB4ha2pD2
You can find state quarters plated in just about EVERYTHING. Gold, silver, platinum. Even ruthenium and rhodium:
coinsofamerica.com/state-quarter-rhodium-cufflink/
We should send a few to Coinside7 so he can buy his meds.
plated. read the other posts.
By several, you mean a thousand, right?
By the way, that coin might have come from me. I dumped a bunch of silver, platinum and gold plated quarters into a coinstar. When it's only a random coin or even a complete set with a bad plating job, it's just not worth trying to sell them.
I do have a complete set of gold-plated quarters at the moment if you want to find a bunch of errors in your mail.
I legitimately believe I will never find a true error in circulation.
That's why most of us don't bother looking. You will almost never find a major error as they rarely get into circulation. You have to really love minor cuds or barely visible clips or grease-filled letters to even bother looking.
The kind of "errors" you might find are the ones that are very hard to see for a novice. Struck with proof dies, for example, where the only difference is letter thickness or something like that. And the type of minor errors you are likely to find have almost no retail value.
But, it is free to look and if you find it fun, go ahead.
When we bought them in at the coin shop we paid face value and gave them out in the cash register.
I assume that most major errors these days are discovered at the huge coin processors who get the huge containers of coins mint. As I understand it, they agree to return any error they find to the mint, but I doubt that happens.
Before you get excited and think just because it's plated in 'platinum' it has value, the platinum is "microns" thick and only worth a few cents.
"Keep your malarkey filter in good operating order" -Walter Breen
I've found some pretty impressive errors over the years including a couple with quite a bit of wear. f course now that the counting houses are removing errors and returning them to the mint and people are watching their change more closely these are getting harder and harder to find.
Until the end of the last century it seemed no one ever even glanced at their change.
It's been reported that the outfits that plated these quarters often wouldn't even spring for a few cents worth of platinum for their "platinum plated coins". So this could be "platinum" plated instead of silver or platinum plated.
In any case it's not worth the time and effort to determine its nature because it will be plated almost certainly.
Why is somebody plating wrong planchet coins?
Where is Occam's Razor when we need it? oh here it is,
Occam's Razor
When we are faced with more than one hypothesis that explains the data equally well, we choose the simpler explanation.
A hairy creature in the woods is more likely a bear than Bigfoot.
An unknown object in the sky is more likely a balloon than a flying saucer.
When you hear hoof beats, think of horses not zebras.
“I believe in intuitions and inspirations. I sometimes feel that I am right. I do not know that I am. When two expeditions of scientists, financed by the Royal Academy, went forth to test my theory of relativity, I was convinced that their conclusions would tally with my hypothesis. I was not surprised when the eclipse of May 29, 1919, confirmed my intuitions. I would have been surprised if I had been wrong.”
“Then you trust more to your imagination than to your knowledge?”
“I am enough of the artist to draw freely upon my imagination. Imagination is more important than knowledge. Knowledge is limited. Imagination encircles the world.”
Albert Einstein- quoted in Saturday Evening Post interview (1929)
RE: "A hairy creature in the woods is more likely a bear than Bigfoot."
Nope. "A hairy creature in the woods is more likely el presidente on his golf course than a bear."
Not funny.
I live in a city, when I hear hoof beats I think of cloggers not horses. Although it is more likely that I'll hear Dr Dre's beats than hoof beats.
Please remember that it is Democrats who lack a sense of humor. Republicans should feel free to laugh, even at one of their own.
Agreed, mostly.
Now imagine if that same quip was made about the previous "presidente".
Since this is a coin forum, the OP is a plated piece worth twenty five cents that will be rejected by Coinstar.
Funny you should mention the Coinstar. I have mixed results with plated coins in the Coinstar. I always use the same one, sometimes it takes them, sometimes it doesn't.
Remember when the previous presidents handicap was classified? Even Michael Jordan called him a hack, even with all his practice.
The original quote might be funny so some, but after hearing about the White House Correspondents Dinner debacle last night, I am not in a "funny" mood today.
So I will simply mention that I silver plated dozens and dozens of state quarters back in the day - then spent them. They sure were purdy.
“In matters of style, swim with the current; in matters of principle, stand like a rock." - Thomas Jefferson
My digital cameo album 1950-64 Cameos - take a look!
I used to buy the $25 bags of quarters from the Mint. It was relatively common to find minor errors such as struck thru grease.