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I'm not sure that there have ben enough of them auctioned to get a value at different grades. May have to do a bit of research on this unless someone here has a track on it. Have you got a good photo of the date and MM to post.
I think I may have an inverted "S" 1946-S Lincoln cent. If so, how much is it worth in VF condition?
You may want to contact "Trails" this Forum. I believe he is the first person who found this variety and he may have some additional information that he can share with you. You can also e-mail him at Wavysteps2003@aol.com as posted on his website.
Since BJ Neff found the first one, I have found one as well but in a lower grade. From what I have gathered, there have been 6 reported as of Sept 1, 2008. There really hasn't been enough auction data or private sales to establish a price range. I would say that Brad's figures would be about right though.
Bob Piazza
Former Lincoln Cent Attributer Coppercoins.com
I have one of these inverted 'S' 1946 Lincolns(WIMM-001). The one shown looks sort-of similar to inverted ball serif knob-tail MMS-006 but is hard to tell without a really good picture or an in-hand examination.
I am very certain that it is not the same one shown in errorscope and the one Brian is selling. If you see it, the mintmark didn't seem to get punched straight in and the bottom portion is almost flush with the surface of the coin. Yours doesn't appear to do the the same but maybe it is a second die with the same inverted error?
A macro setting helps. Zoom works so long as the camera can focus on the coin. A TRIPOD is important and either use some type of shutter release cable/remote or set it on a TIMER. Any movement will impact the clarity of the shot.
I would also suggest experimenting with light - daylight can be good in certain circumstance. An external flash or a series of shots with the lights held in different places will yield distinctly separate results.
If you have a SLR or a DSLR you can buy a macro lens - they're expensive though. They also make reasonably priced attachable magnification lens. There's something else that's called a reversing ring where you reverse your normal lens and it acts like a macro lens.
But nothing seems to beat a scope with camera attached to it - sadly I don't have one of these.
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