My Newest Coolest Error Coin so far this year ......

This is one sweet eye appealing error coin. Looks like a piece of art to me. Just try to imagine the sequence of events for this fabulous unique error to occur. Thanks to ebay bucks and ebates I got this coin for 50% off. Remember there is only dreck on ebay 






0
Comments
here's one:
www.brunkauctions.com
we have it for sale at the shop i work at.......it reminded me of the one you posted
www.brunkauctions.com
Looking for Top Pop Mercury Dime Varieties & High Grade Mercury Dime Toners.
Shame it's not dated
<< <i>not mine, i'm afraid
we have it for sale at the shop i work at.......it reminded me of the one you posted >>
Nice web site
Easy to navagate
And best of all...You have pictures
<< <i>What a chunk of superb gem junk
Shame it's not dated
It is so close to being dated and maybe on a good day I will be able to make it out. It Is a 199x, sure wish it was 2000.
Anyway, the date isn't too important because the error is just too darn cool. It is almost the size of a half dollar.
<< <i>How the heel do these things get out of the mint???? I just do not understand this - oh sure, I can speculate on sneaky employees etc, but it just seems like their security would prevent that... amazing. Cheers, RickO >>
Lunchboxes. Even US mint forklift oil pans. Exmint employies doing hard federal time that got caught smuggling the errors out.
<< <i>Very
<< <i>How the heel do these things get out of the mint???? Lunchboxes. Even US mint forklift oil pans. Exmint employies doing hard federal time that got caught smuggling the errors out. >>
Yes that is true, but the vast majority of mint errors just happen as machines break and as people make mistakes and then the big counting rooms would catch them and sell them to error dealers. That was before my time, I wish is was that easy now to buy errors at wholesale.
<< <i>Very
<< <i>How the heel do these things get out of the mint???? I just do not understand this - oh sure, I can speculate on sneaky employees etc, but it just seems like their security would prevent that... amazing. Cheers, RickO >>
Lunchboxes. Even US mint forklift oil pans. Exmint employies doing hard federal time that got caught smuggling the errors out. >>
WoW really? Fed time is always hard time , wow .. kinda takes the sparkle away to think some dude is sitting in the pen to provide them.
BST Transactions: DonnyJf, MrOrganic, Justanothercoinaddict, Fivecents, Slq, Jdimmick,
Robb, Tee135, Ibzman350, Mercfan, Outhaul, Erickso1, Cugamongacoins, Indiananationals, Wayne Herndon
Negative BST Transactions:
<< <i>Lunchboxes. Even US mint forklift oil pans. Exmint employies doing hard federal time that got caught smuggling the errors out >>
<< <i>WoW really? Fed time is always hard time , wow .. kinda takes the sparkle away to think some dude is sitting in the pen to provide them >>
A very small ammount got out this way. Lomus and other coin rolling delivery firms would pull them out of the counting machines when they jammed the machine. The employies would buy them at face value and sell them to coin dealers. I actually witnessed a Lomus employ doing this at my local B&M years back. The US mint cracked down on this practice quite a few years ago. The US mint threatened to drop the multi million contracts if all mint errors weren't returned to the Mint.
It was most like just found in a mint sealed bag.
Ed. S.
(EJS)
Bad meaning good
but it way rocks and you rock for having that bad boy!
congrats, maybe smoeday Ill have smoething dat nice in my collection
Go BIG or GO HOME. ©Bill
AB
<< <i>wasn't smuggled out in a body cavity >>
<< <i>bad ass error you have there >>
Mmm...do I see some type of correlation there
<< <i>Wow, that really is cool. Tough to make out the exact sequence; either three or four strikes, possibly one with a double indent in the middle of it. Can you rotate the photo of the obverse to show the first strike in normal orientation? >>
Here is the photo you asked for and here is my explanation of what I think happened, do you think I got it right?
1) Struck as a normal Nickel
2) Struck again ( 2nd Strike) with a blank planchet covering the entire obverse design of the first struck coin.
3) Struck a third time (3rd strike) and the bank shifted and now only covered 7/8 of the design.
4) Struck one last time (4th Strike) with the blank and the coin shifted off center.
As the 4 strikes occurred, the stuck coin kept getting bigger and thinner and the blank plancent (which actually became multi struck on the obverse side) expanded an got quite thin as well. Do you think my coin could also be described as a Die Cap?
Jon
<< <i>Here is the photo you asked for and here is my explanation of what I think happened, do you think I got it right?
1) Struck as a normal Nickel
2) Struck again ( 2nd Strike) with a blank planchet covering the entire obverse design of the first struck coin.
3) Struck a third time (3rd strike) and the bank shifted and now only covered 7/8 of the design.
4) Struck one last time (4th Strike) with the blank and the coin shifted off center.
As the 4 strikes occurred, the stuck coin kept getting bigger and thinner and the blank plancent (which actually became multi struck on the obverse side) expanded an got quite thin as well. Do you think my coin could also be described as a Die Cap? >>
I would say you're almost right. In my opinion the coin was only struck 3 times: 1st strike normal, 2nd 90% indent and broadstruck, 3rd off-center and indent.
Nope, it's just a brockage-maker, not a die cap; the coin didn't stick to any die and then get struck into incoming planchets.
Jon
<< <i>I would say you're almost right. In my opinion the coin was only struck 3 times: 1st strike normal, 2nd 90% indent and broadstruck, 3rd off-center and indent.
Jon >>
Thanks Jon, But why is Liberty not as sharp as In God We ?, Is it because of the metal expansion ? That is why I thought it might be struck 4 times, even tho the reverse show three strikes ( I thought the 2nd strike in my scenario covered the first strike on the reverse). Thank you for your input.
<< <i>
<< <i>I would say you're almost right. In my opinion the coin was only struck 3 times: 1st strike normal, 2nd 90% indent and broadstruck, 3rd off-center and indent.
Jon >>
Thanks Jon, But why is Liberty not as sharp as In God We ?, Is it because of the metal expansion ? That is why I thought it might be struck 4 times, even tho the reverse show three strikes ( I thought the 2nd strike in my scenario covered the first strike on the reverse). Thank you for your input. >>
San Diego, CA
<< <i>
<< <i>I would say you're almost right. In my opinion the coin was only struck 3 times: 1st strike normal, 2nd 90% indent and broadstruck, 3rd off-center and indent.
Jon >>
Thanks Jon, But why is Liberty not as sharp as In God We ?, Is it because of the metal expansion ? That is why I thought it might be struck 4 times, even tho the reverse show three strikes ( I thought the 2nd strike in my scenario covered the first strike on the reverse). Thank you for your input. >>
Probably because of metal flow which caused weakening and distorting of the lettering. I'd have to see the coin in person to 100% rule out a 4th strike.
<< <i>
<< <i>
<< <i>I would say you're almost right. In my opinion the coin was only struck 3 times: 1st strike normal, 2nd 90% indent and broadstruck, 3rd off-center and indent.
Jon >>
Thanks Jon, But why is Liberty not as sharp as In God We ?, Is it because of the metal expansion ? That is why I thought it might be struck 4 times, even tho the reverse show three strikes ( I thought the 2nd strike in my scenario covered the first strike on the reverse). Thank you for your input. >>
Probably because of metal flow which caused weakening and distorting of the lettering. I'd have to see the coin in person to 100% rule out a 4th strike. >>
LIBERTY is not as sharp because the metal here was subjected to horizontal compressive and bending forces. This causes coarsening of the crystalline structure of the metal, producing a matte texture. Vertical compressive forces, horizontal compressive forces, and bending forces will all produce this effect, especially in nickels.
Like you, I first thought that the coarse texture was a sign of a second uniface strike or an indent, but examination of many multi-struck nickels has shown me that the effect can develop even in the absence of an overlying planchet.
I agree with the assesment that there were three strikes.