why is the 3C Nickel series the most famous one for die clashes?
just got a wicked one that I'll post soon that has tripling in the die clashes! Obviously the dies get together without planchet and then gets serious about making clash coins-why is this series the most prevalent?
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Die pressure is controlled, along with actual pressure of the machine, by the spacing of the dies. In other words, at maximum travel, the distance of between the dies help determine the strength of the strike. (Someone tell me if this totally wrong).
Why it's applicable in this case: 3-cent nickels were the first high percentage nickel coins, and they were still learning the requirements. They set the dies close together to help strike this tough metal, and that left more prominant die clashes when a planchet inevitably failed to feed. (This might explain why, generally, there are fewer die clashes late in the 3-cent nickel series...they got better at it).
As for half dimes and 3-cent silvers, they are such thin coins to begin with, that no matter what the dies are going to be close together resulting in prominant clashes when a planchet isn't in the coining chamber.
Discuss.....
I am trying to find a really cool die clashed 3C nickel. Since Jeremy posted his, that is what I am looking for.
the trick is finding a nice MS clashed 3CN with tones of pink and Nickel blue. those are keepers for sure.
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Worry is the interest you pay on a debt you may not owe.
"Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
"Everything you say should be true, but not everything true should be said."----Voltaire
Awesome IHC clash.
Best,
Sunnywood
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Half dimes have a lot of clashes. Here is one on an 1853 with arrows. You can see the whole date on the reverse.
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Besides the size of the coin I think the time frame has a lot to do with it too. The best example for clashes are IH cents, mass produced with the least consideration for quality control. 1865 IH's are the king of clashed IH's, and 1865 3 Cent Nickels may not be far behind. Dies were kept in use way beyond their life span.
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Worry is the interest you pay on a debt you may not owe.
"Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
"Everything you say should be true, but not everything true should be said."----Voltaire
The question is how do two dies slam together without a planchet between them, and how is that error not caught, or cared about, after many subsequent coin strikes? The Mint was in rush mode to produce cents and other lower denominations during the mid-1860's. The guys running the presses never imagined a 21st Century coin collecting community examining their product on the PCGS forum
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poor foresight!!
but mechanically speaking, how do the dies shift then clash twice before the coin is struck?
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how do the dies shift then clash twice before the coin is struck?
I imagine the slight difference in where the dies clashed (a couple thousandths of an inch probably in airplanenuts's example), is within the tolerance level for the travel of the dies - especially without a planchet in between. And the "clash twice" does not have to happen successively - it could clash, some coins are then produced (with one image on the coin), miss feed a planchet and another clash (now two halo images) and some more coins produced - then someone finally sees the quality problem and removes the dies from service.
Here's my example that is also just slightly off center:
Crackout: great splainin!!
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<< <i>Airplanenut -- I've seen lots of reverse 3 Cent die clashes but that's the mother of all obverse clashes. Doubled and tripled in some areas, very cool coin.
Paul, actually, it's 4 full clashes on the obverse, and 5 on the reverse
If I'm not mistaken this was Russ Logans coin. Nice provenance
Here is one I found awhile back - it has a nice clash, and also had dies rotated
to medallic alignment!
Ken
I know little about the minting process from this era but I'd guess the dies chattered against each other since there was no resistence (no planchet) between them.
The ultimate question is how did off-center clashes, like this 1880 S1, occur? Did the obverse die fall loose from the press, striking the reverse die in both a rotated and off-angle manner? A question I've posed here many times and another coin I sold on EBay for a very reasonable price.