1992 D spider web a day late
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Thanks for the update Mike... We appreciate all the help you give us... Very interesting how the plating was damaged but not due to a strike thru... This is one for the ghost stories
Jim
(A.K.A. Elmer Fudd)
Be verwy verwy quiet... I'm hunting coins!!! Good Hunting!!!
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I went back looking at these images (Post #30 by Jon) after reading Mike's reply.
Is it my imagination but in image #2, does there appear to be a thin "channel" running down the middle of the wider lines towards the middle of the image?
I could very easily be out in "Pluto" range left field but to me this seems to indicate something on/in the zinc base that may have deteriorated or contracted and "pulled" the copper plating with it as it cooled/shrunk.
I would think that any anomaly on the face of the zinc core at the time of the plating would be filled by the plating process. Whereas if the zinc deteriorated after the plating was completed (cooling = shrinking) might accentuate subsurface anomalies.
This mystery may be one for Batman- a real Puzzler???
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Some of the lines look like scratches so that may explain the channels... I don't think you are on Pluto but Mars has canals that look similar so we may both be thereI went back looking at these images (Post #30 by Jon) after reading Mike's reply.
Is it my imagination but in image #2, does there appear to be a thin "channel" running down the middle of the wider lines towards the middle of the image?
I could very easily be out in "Pluto" range left field but to me this seems to indicate something on/in the zinc base that may have deteriorated or contracted and "pulled" the copper plating with it as it cooled/shrunk.
I would think that any anomaly on the face of the zinc core at the time of the plating would be filled by the plating process. Whereas if the zinc deteriorated after the plating was completed (cooling = shrinking) might accentuate subsurface anomalies.
This mystery may be one for Batman- a real Puzzler???
Jim
(A.K.A. Elmer Fudd)
Be verwy verwy quiet... I'm hunting coins!!! Good Hunting!!!
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I have Stoneman227's 1989 cent. My examination under a microscope indicates that the fine lines are indeed cracks in the copper plating. I have never encountered this pattern of cracking before. In every other case I've seen, the cracks are few in number and widely separated. This coin does show areas of post-strike damage on both faces, but I see no evidence that these are related to the cracking. There are two circular/subcircular elevations on Lincoln's coat; I suspect these also represent post-strike damage. I think I will use this coin for a column on cracked and peeling plating. Okay if I use your photos, John? They're excellent. -- MikeComment
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Thanks once again for the quick response Mike!! That is an extremely cool looking coin, congrats John!!I have Stoneman227's 1989 cent. My examination under a microscope indicates that the fine lines are indeed cracks in the copper plating. I have never encountered this pattern of cracking before. In every other case I've seen, the cracks are few in number and widely separated. This coin does show areas of post-strike damage on both faces, but I see no evidence that these are related to the cracking. There are two circular/subcircular elevations on Lincoln's coat; I suspect these also represent post-strike damage. I think I will use this coin for a column on cracked and peeling plating. Okay if I use your photos, John? They're excellent. -- Mike
As Mike said, those pics are fantastic too!
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The fine lines are incuse, with the wider ones extending all the way through the plating. The edges are quite sharp, as one would expect of plating cracks.Comment
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Many many thanks Mike !
I just emailed you the original files.
JohnSo sad ... My reverse consumption engine was a broken fuel gauge ... gonna look at coins now. JohnComment
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John's 1989 cent currently appears in the latest edition of Coin World. Unfortunately, the reproduced image is too small to properly show the array of fine cracks. Image size is up to the editor -- I have no input.Comment


Don't forget the solar panel... No lectricity up there
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