Is it possible for this to have been struck on a foreign planchet? In 1944 the Denver mint also struck a Curacao 1 cent 95% copper 5% zinc foreign coin but it only weighed 2.5g... as you can see from the pics it's substantially thinner than the reg '44 and weighs .5 to .6 less. A couple of the other coins I have posted in the last pic also appear ate up by what appears to be a corrosive but didn't lose no where near that amount. I didn't want to scrape on the rim without checking here first to make sure I wasn't further damaging a possible error coin. Surely if a copper coin can end up on a '89 and '90 coin 7 to 8 years later, it's possible to get one mixed up in the same year, same mint lol
Idk, need some seasoned knowledge to help me out on this one, I'm prolly overlooking some facts that prove otherwise. The foreign coin is also 19mm diameter and on the site it also stated that a US cent could be struck on this planchet. I know the coin is damaged and not worth much of nothing even if it was, would just be happy to have found one. Thank you for looking
DD
Idk, need some seasoned knowledge to help me out on this one, I'm prolly overlooking some facts that prove otherwise. The foreign coin is also 19mm diameter and on the site it also stated that a US cent could be struck on this planchet. I know the coin is damaged and not worth much of nothing even if it was, would just be happy to have found one. Thank you for looking

DD



thank you for the knowledge. It was interesting still tho to rummage thru all the different foreign coins struck at the US mints and their specifications
Be verwy verwy quiet... I'm hunting coins!!! 


Comment