absence of uniformity Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago I doubt it but will this add any premium to a otherwise normal coin? Thanks. Quote
Rob Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago (edited) Only if it was struck on a rectangular blank, like yours. Edited 2 hours ago by Rob Quote
absence of uniformity Posted 2 hours ago Author Posted 2 hours ago 9 minutes ago, Rob said: Only if it was struck on a rectangular blank, like yours. Are you bored again Rob? Quote
terrysoldpennies Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago I can only real talk about my observations on copper or bronze pennies, as that is my major interest . I find that over stamped letters/ numbers are extremely common on coins up to about 1863 though some can still be seen through to the 20th century . The last I think being 1945. The ones that are of interest to me and I would guess a lot of collectors are the ones that are dramatically out of place or triple struck . Some examples below Triple struck Y quite sort after , note the G and D overstruck but of little interest Here's Y over Y dramatically out of place 8 over 8 And just look at this one !! 1 Quote
absence of uniformity Posted 33 minutes ago Author Posted 33 minutes ago 2 hours ago, Rob said: Only if it was struck on a rectangular blank, like yours. I was under the impression this forum is for educational purposes. A genuine coin related question IMO is worthy of a relevant response. For you and any other's please just scroll past if you are not capable of keeping it informative/educational. Quote
secret santa Posted 32 minutes ago Posted 32 minutes ago 3 hours ago, absence of uniformity said: I doubt it but will this add any premium to a otherwise normal coin? Honest answer - absolutely not. 1 Quote
absence of uniformity Posted 31 minutes ago Author Posted 31 minutes ago 1 hour ago, terrysoldpennies said: I can only real talk about my observations on copper or bronze pennies, as that is my major interest . I find that over stamped letters/ numbers are extremely common on coins up to about 1863 though some can still be seen through to the 20th century . The last I think being 1945. The ones that are of interest to me and I would guess a lot of collectors are the ones that are dramatically out of place or triple struck . Some examples below Triple struck Y quite sort after , note the G and D overstruck but of little interest Here's Y over Y dramatically out of place 8 over 8 And just look at this one !! Excellent thank you for taking the time to explain this. Makes perfect sense. Quote
absence of uniformity Posted 28 minutes ago Author Posted 28 minutes ago 3 minutes ago, secret santa said: Honest answer - absolutely not. Ok thanks. Quote
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