Tarekss1 Posted Tuesday at 11:31 PM Share Posted Tuesday at 11:31 PM Is it easy to use ? Would you be able to measure the rotation accurately ? ThePhiladelphiaPenny and Henri Charriere 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Coinbuf Posted Wednesday at 02:16 AM Share Posted Wednesday at 02:16 AM Since it's designed to measure die rotation it stands to reason that it can measure die rotation. No I've never used it I don't collect errors. RonnieR131 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
powermad5000 Posted Wednesday at 04:52 AM Share Posted Wednesday at 04:52 AM (edited) Deleted info. OP knows everything. Edited Wednesday at 05:15 AM by powermad5000 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
J P M Posted Wednesday at 12:17 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 12:17 PM On 10/22/2024 at 7:31 PM, Tarekss1 said: Is it easy to use ? Would you be able to measure the rotation accurately ? I am sure it is very nice. Finding a rotated die coin, you would not need to use this I think you would be able to see a 90 or a 180-degree reverse just by looking at it. I agree that a 15 to 90 rotation is harder to see but none of these will bring in a paycheck unless it is a very pristine coin. JT2 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tarekss1 Posted Wednesday at 12:59 PM Author Share Posted Wednesday at 12:59 PM (edited) Thank you J P M for your reply. The trickiest is between 15 and 45 degrees i think. As for the coin sale price, I don't always buy coins whether graded or ungraded for what others are willing to pay for them. Sometimes certain coins get very expensive because all of a sudden collectors are willing to pay for them, and when they stop buying their price goes down fast. And the opposite happens as well. Edited Wednesday at 01:02 PM by Tarekss1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...