Vespesian Posted May 29, 2024 Posted May 29, 2024 An unusual 1945 penny with an intriguing. ‘ elongated curved tooth ‘ below the 5 in the date . It seems to be part of the original coin and doesn’t appear to have been added on at a later date , …is it part of a number? Quote
Rob Posted May 29, 2024 Posted May 29, 2024 Looks like a bit of trapped swarf. You can't tell from the picture how well adhered to the surface it is. Quote
blakeyboy Posted May 29, 2024 Posted May 29, 2024 Hmm..do you have the rim mis-alignment like on my one? Quote
Rob Posted May 29, 2024 Posted May 29, 2024 That looks like a bit of rim that has squeezed past the die, but being thin has almost detached. That would do as an explanation for the other one also. Next question is - Same dies? Quote
blakeyboy Posted May 31, 2024 Posted May 31, 2024 What does that mean? How did the word appear? Is it from that America they've got now? Quote
Peckris 2 Posted June 1, 2024 Posted June 1, 2024 On 5/31/2024 at 9:18 AM, blakeyboy said: What does that mean? As I understand it, a cud is simply a bit of stray metal (from the previous strike?) that's got onto the die/planchet, i.e. a one-off misstrike. I don't know the word's origin except in relation to cows! Quote
Mr T Posted June 8, 2024 Posted June 8, 2024 On 5/31/2024 at 6:18 PM, blakeyboy said: What does that mean? How did the word appear? Is it from that America they've got now? I thought it stood for Chipped Up Die or something like that, though I'm not sure if that's true. Quote
blakeyboy Posted June 8, 2024 Posted June 8, 2024 If you look at the picture, the whole piece has moved outwards- the teeth and rim have moved, so there is surely a crack underneath the metal blob.... Is it reverse die or obverse die that sits in the collar while the opposite side comes down and strikes, or does the ring/collar also move? Quote
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