Options
Dented quarter

My Mom found this quarter and we don't know what could have made the dents in it. They are small and really round. Does anybody have an idea?


Thanks!
Thanks!

What Mr. Spock would say about numismatics...
... "Fascinating, but not logical"
"Live long and prosper"
My "How I Started" columns

"Live long and prosper"
My "How I Started" columns
0
Comments
2 Cam-Slams!
1 Russ POTD!
Dennis
Like VOC Numismatics on facebook
<< <i>A perforator? Are you sure it's a coin and not some paper? Otherwise it isn't a perforator
Dennis >>
It's a real quarter. Hard to imagine a BB gun being strong enough to make a dent in it.
"Live long and prosper"
My "How I Started" columns
<< <i>Looks like the work of a BB gun to me. >>
I just asked my mom if I could try it and see if it looks the same but she said, "No, you'll shoot your eye out".
"Live long and prosper"
My "How I Started" columns
<< <i>
<< <i>Looks like the work of a BB gun to me. >>
I just asked my mom if I could try it and see if it looks the same but she said, "No, you'll shoot your eye out".
Herb
Next mystery please.
Ray
do just about this amount of damage from sixty or seventy feet, but I don't believe
that's whar caused it. The middle damage (lowest on obverse) is pushed in from
both sides as though it were held with a tool and then hit on both the obverse once
and the reverse. There may have been some point to this.
<< <i> There may have been some point to this. >>
We thought so too! The dents are a little smaller than a BB.
"Live long and prosper"
My "How I Started" columns
Liberty: Parent of Science & Industry
<< <i>No, it's a BB gun, there are plenty strong enough. I can't put a number on the quarters I shot as a kid 20 years ago... that might even be one of mine! I was a pretty good shot with my Daisy Powerline pistol at 20 yards. >>
I'm sure you're right that a BB could have done the damage but it doesn't
account for it being hit on both sides in nearly the exact same place.
I think I remember this coin!
Liberty: Parent of Science & Industry
<< <i>After hitting the coin once, I'd turn it over so I'd know which was the second shot.
I think I remember this coin!
"Live long and prosper"
My "How I Started" columns
-------------------------------
Bridget
----------
(My beautiful children!!)
Was yesterday strange quarter day?????
<< <i>TOOOOOO strange!! I just got a quarter as change the other day that has BIG SIMILARITIES...I will scan it in now and post it when I am done so you all can see............ >>
<< <i>I received a quarter in change yesterday too, but it didn't look like this. It almost looks clipped but the details on both obverse and reverse look smooshed in.
Was yesterday strange quarter day????? >>
"Live long and prosper"
My "How I Started" columns
-------------------------------
Bridget
----------
(My beautiful children!!)
<< <i>Here is my quarter from yesterday...
Possibly dropped from a high place with a little spin to it to keep it on edge. Or maybe thrown from a high place... If this was not done at the mint, it looks to me like the coin hit something pretty hard right on it's edge... How does the coin look from the side (Edge) is the coin wavy at all?
Ray
Ray
Edited to add, that I'm not trying to hijack the thread, just posting pictures to prove I wasn't making up the strange quarter day...
but then bent and filed so it would go through a coin counter. Most banks will
not redeem coins which don't go through the counter. They are supposed to
be returned to the customer. The fed doesn't handle much coin anymore and
never was very quick to pull money out of circulation for destruction. The dam-
aged coins are becoming an increasinly familiar sight with more than 20% of
the old quarters being numismatic culls or otherwise severely damaged.
-------------------------------
Bridget
----------
(My beautiful children!!)
-------------------------------
Bridget
----------
(My beautiful children!!)
is not unusual on these coins. Many of the coins from this era were very lightly
hit by the dies, so often the edges and rims were not well defined to start with.
Note the weak strike.
It appears this coin was soldered to something and the raised spots on the ob-
verse are caused by the bonding separating when it failed under the heat of
solder. The cause of the other damage is less apparent but likely happened
when it was being used for another purpose.
If the edges are primarily smooth just at ten o'clock and four o'clock then it may
have been hit with a hammer soundly or crushed a little in a vise.
NIce work writting on the pictures. You really know how to work these computers. Actually there are some warping programs that could produce simailar photos.
-------------------------------
Bridget
----------
(My beautiful children!!)