Hello from utah.
Moderator: Daniel
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Here's a link to how to post a topic with images in our community https://coinauctionshelp.com/welcome-to ... community/
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You also agree to follow these guidelines. You must agree to these rules to be a member of this forum. NO SPAM! Spam is deleted within minutes, no spam will ever be left in our community.
1. Post a front and back image of your coin with a specific question about what you’re seeing or asking about and one coin per topic.
2. Please remove coin from the holder unless it’s US or an official mint case or unless it is graded by a grading service.
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7. Always be respectful even if something makes you upset or you don’t agree with a member. You can always get a second opinion elsewhere. If you have an issue then politely ask an admin in an PM. PM’s are for issues, technical and personal, but not for coin questions (refer to number 5 on this list). Our community is not a soap box for complaining or drama, so please refrain from doing so here.[/size]
Here's a link to how to post a topic with images in our community https://coinauctionshelp.com/welcome-to ... community/
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________
You also agree to follow these guidelines. You must agree to these rules to be a member of this forum. NO SPAM! Spam is deleted within minutes, no spam will ever be left in our community.
1. Post a front and back image of your coin with a specific question about what you’re seeing or asking about and one coin per topic.
2. Please remove coin from the holder unless it’s US or an official mint case or unless it is graded by a grading service.
3. Images should be taken by a camera or cell phone camera, we ask that members don’t use images through a microscope screen.
4. Always start your own topic, please don’t ask about your coin or post your coin in someone else’s coin topic.
5. Do not send private messages about your coin unless an Admin ask you too and the same for sending emails through the board.
6. No spam. Do not post any links to your coin or other non-coin websites.
7. Always be respectful even if something makes you upset or you don’t agree with a member. You can always get a second opinion elsewhere. If you have an issue then politely ask an admin in an PM. PM’s are for issues, technical and personal, but not for coin questions (refer to number 5 on this list). Our community is not a soap box for complaining or drama, so please refrain from doing so here.[/size]
- amber.fresh
- Coining Around
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- Joined: Sun Feb 26, 2017 3:07 am
Hello from utah.
hi I'm new and just getting into the coin collecting thing. I'm having a problem with distinguishing the fake and real double die.[/font]
- Daniel
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Re: Hello from utah.
A true doubled die is when the die itself is doubled and there's at least 8 different methods this can happen as the coin die is being created. Think of it as play-doh, if you pressed a coin in play-doh then turned the coin slight then pressed into the play-doh again you would get a doubled look. A die is created by "pressing" and the mint use to double press to create the coin die, and this is how coin dies get doubled, when something is changed from the first "pressing" to the next.
A true doubled die's features will be the same height as each other, in example, a 1 will look like a 1 or it will have a little split or extra thickness. A machine doubled coin mimics this but machine doubling happens when the die strikes the coin and the die is a little lose, so it pushes metal away from the side of a 1 or other feature, and this metal push will be flat and look more like a shelf.
Furthermore in machine doubling it looks like someone actually use an exacto knife blade and cut the digit or letter, it has a sharper appearance because it is actually damage to the metal from the edge of the die cavity.
I hope that helps a little. Here's some more reference to help you http://coinauctionshelp.com/doubledieminterror.html
A true doubled die's features will be the same height as each other, in example, a 1 will look like a 1 or it will have a little split or extra thickness. A machine doubled coin mimics this but machine doubling happens when the die strikes the coin and the die is a little lose, so it pushes metal away from the side of a 1 or other feature, and this metal push will be flat and look more like a shelf.
Furthermore in machine doubling it looks like someone actually use an exacto knife blade and cut the digit or letter, it has a sharper appearance because it is actually damage to the metal from the edge of the die cavity.
I hope that helps a little. Here's some more reference to help you http://coinauctionshelp.com/doubledieminterror.html
- Paul
- Master Die Variety Examiner
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