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I'm not a error guy, nor could tell you what caused it, but boy I do like it. That's something I've never seen. The 195,000 they want for it seems about 194,500 to much. LOL
A reverse brockage happens when a coin is struck and sticks to the reverse die. The next coin minted (like this one) would have an incuse obverse on the reverse and a normal obverse...struck with the obverse of a coin and the obverse die.
Although it may not seem so, the design on this coin is incuse. I can tell by the lighting and the rest of the slab.
It's real, no question.
Charles D. Daughtrey, NLG, Author, "Looking Through Lincoln Cents"
[URL="http://www.coppercoins.com/"]http://www.coppercoins.com[/URL]
Crazy price, way crazy, but it's the real deal. Chuck stole all my words, but I've seen these, we're just so used to the design that what we see is familiar and our brain automatically assumes.
XF because it may have been carried as a pocket piece after being found. I've seen amazing errors that people just carried around and handled for years, not being "error coin folk".
[B][FONT=Franklin Gothic Medium][SIZE=2]Chris & Charity Welch- [COLOR=red]LIVEAN[/COLOR][COLOR=black]DIE[/COLOR][COLOR=blue]VARIETIES[/COLOR][/SIZE][/FONT][/B]
[FONT=Franklin Gothic Medium]Purveyors of Modern Treasure [/FONT]
To make it more confusing I think it's in the holder with the brockage rev on the front of the slab.
Or am I confused?
It's amazing that the brockage image is so well detailed. I would have thought that the coin and the blank being equal hardness would result in a mushy looking brockage but this one is really detailed and clear.
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