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Big Nub numismatics

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  1. As long as it is an undamaged coin with a mint defect, I'm ecstatic. Grease strike throughs are the most common mint error, so a high premium would already be hard to come by.
  2. I picked this up for a few dollars from a junk bin. I purchased this because of how cheap it was, and the fact that it might be a grease strike through error. It is a solid VG (in my opinion) except for the missing design elements where "America" should be on the obverse. There is obviously some wear, but I'm unaware of any coins that have uneven were to account for this. These are the best pictures I could get, and I know this will affect your opinion. Any help is appreciated, thank you!
  3. What a find! This looks to be a true retained struck through. The right collector will pay a handsome amount, just make sure you keep th black piece along with it.
  4. Nice find, must have been near when they decided to replace the die.
  5. I'll need better photos to make an accurate guess.
  6. I mean, I don't know much about nature, but I'm pretty sure both acid etching and sandblasting are not from the environment. So RR2020 does have a point.
  7. However annoying, his use of capitalized words are impeccable. I could hear him pounding his keyboard and angrily typing all the way over hear. I wonder if he has better things to do than try to persuade others into his numismatic cult of worshipping the false matte dime.
  8. I don't see any machine doubling, that is just light reflecting of the edges of the devices. This is just a common zincoln.
  9. That looks like PMD. Someone shaved off most of this coin's design, or maybe it went through the laundry. If it wasn't, it would be more of a strike through rather than die adjustment marks. Die adjustment marks ceased to exist in the mid to late 19th century. The mint got things down pat after that and there was no need.
  10. The coin is typical for its condition. I'm not seeing any doubling. The mark on seven is PMD, and i don't even see machine doubling anywhere else.