threbu Posted January 24, 2019 Posted January 24, 2019 Hello, Thanks for approving me. This is my first post... I have found a 2014 Shield 50p in my change which shows a remarkable amount of doubling on the reverse. Whilst googling I came across this post on the forum which shows very similar doubling on a 2013 Shield 50p. The consensus on that thread was that it was doubling, although before anyone could shed further light on which kind of doubling it was, the thread weirdly descended into talk about 10p coins. I have researched doubled dies, but I'm not sure what type of doubling this would be. It depends on whether the Royal The Mint uses a single or double squeeze press, but I can't find any information about this on their website. I know that the US Mints changed to single squeeze presses in the late 90s. I'm thinking that my coin could either be a Class IV Offset Hub Doubling or a Class IX Shifted Hub Doubling? I know this coin is likely not valuable, as other examples (2013 and 2014 Shields) have sold recently for around 3 to 4 times face. But I am interested in error coins (particularly those from the US, where errors are much more widely collected and sought-after!) and would love to know just what kind of error this is. Any help would be greatly appreciated! Many thanks Quote
Unwilling Numismatist Posted January 25, 2019 Posted January 25, 2019 It looks like a fake, it's very poorly produced reverse design is in line with some previously found on alibaba.com or aliexpress.com .. like this one which does not have correctly formed devices on the reverse - the lions are mis-aligned and of child-like execution, and the obverse gives the impression of being cast or pressed very badly, then polished. I cannot actually understand why someone would spend $4 on a 50p though, but people have done. Quote
threbu Posted January 29, 2019 Author Posted January 29, 2019 I hadn't considered the possibility of it being a fake. How much would it cost to make a fake 50p? Would it be worth it? For the record, the weight is spot on: 8.06g (compared to 7.98g g - 8.08g for all the others I weighed). The colour of the planchet is correct, too, unlike the one in the link from China. And Iit has the same sound against other coins; it doesn't sound dull or dead. Quote
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