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Originally Posted by
VAB2013
Thanks Jon for shipping this to Jim for some really cool pics! Reminds me of the top of a sugar cookie that's been mashed with a fork! How did the "vice person" manage to not mess up the reverse of the coin very much?
They were fairly good!!!
Jim
(A.K.A. Elmer Fudd) Be verwy verwy quiet... I'm hunting coins!!! Good Hunting!!!
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Originally Posted by
jfines69
They were fairly good!!!
Yes I think so Jim. Do you think there is any way possible it was not done with a vice but rather just mashed against each other in a bag or something?
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Originally Posted by
VAB2013
Yes I think so Jim. Do you think there is any way possible it was not done with a vice but rather just mashed against each other in a bag or something?
No idea on that... The damage is really deep!!!
Jim
(A.K.A. Elmer Fudd) Be verwy verwy quiet... I'm hunting coins!!! Good Hunting!!!
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Originally Posted by
jfines69
I did the pics... This is cool looking PSD (Vice job)... Some one did a fairly good job on it... I did and overlay to show how it was set to cause all the damage... I even did some pointers so you can see the different areas that were in contact... There isn't as much damage on the rev as I expected... Looks like they had something at the edge near the first T of STATES to hold the coin in place while crushing the other side in... Thanks Jon for letting me take a look at this and getting the pics!!!
Nice work Jim and great pics!! The overlay shows where everything came from very well! You don't need to worry with sending it back, maybe use it again in the future for vise job shots.
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Originally Posted by
VAB2013
Yes I think so Jim. Do you think there is any way possible it was not done with a vice but rather just mashed against each other in a bag or something?
It's much deeper than you would get from the normal bag marks from being handled in a bag unless they ran it over with a forklift or something.
One thing I always add when we say a coin is a garage job is that yes some tricky people do things to coins to trick us but also with hundreds of billions of coins they get put through all sorts of abuse for other reasons, used as a spacer, maybe more than one so they mash into eachother, jammed in machines, used as screwdrivers or whatever so it's not easy to tell how or why or intentional or not.
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Originally Posted by
GrumpyEd
It's much deeper than you would get from the normal bag marks from being handled in a bag unless they ran it over with a forklift or something.
One thing I always add when we say a coin is a garage job is that yes some tricky people do things to coins to trick us but also with hundreds of billions of coins they get put through all sorts of abuse for other reasons, used as a spacer, maybe more than one so they mash into eachother, jammed in machines, used as screwdrivers or whatever so it's not easy to tell how or why or intentional or not.
Very true Ed... Don't forget the temporary replacement fuse
Jim
(A.K.A. Elmer Fudd) Be verwy verwy quiet... I'm hunting coins!!! Good Hunting!!!
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