Welcome!

Log in or register to take part.

CONECA (pronounced: CŌ´NECA) is a national numismatic organization devoted to the education of error and variety coin collectors. CONECA focuses on many error and variety specialties, including doubled dies, Repunched mintmarks, multiple errors, clips, double strikes, off-metals and off-centers—just to name a few. In addition to its website, CONECA publishes an educational journal, The Errorscope, which is printed and mailed to members bimonthly. CONECA offers a lending library, examination, listing and attribution services; it holds annual meetings at major conventions (referred to as Errorama) around the country.

CONECA was formed through a merger of CONE and NECA in early 1983. To learn more about the fascinating HISTORY OF THE ERROR HOBBY and THE HISTORY OF CONECA, we encourage you to visit us our main site Here

If you're not a member and would like to join see our Membership Application

We thank everybody who has helped make CONECA the great success that it is today!

Register Now

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

2009 AS 0.25 die crack/chipped die/something else?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • 2009 AS 0.25 die crack/chipped die/something else?

    This is a strange one. Got this 2009 American Samoa quarter in change at the chinese place the other day (the owner is also a coin collector and the food's good, who am I to argue? ) and threw it under the scope to spot check for doubling in the center of the field as it was the first of the Samoa quarters I'd gotten. The reverse was clear of doubling, and nothing interesting near Washington's ear, so I zoomed back out to 4.5x and something caught my eye.

    Along the very bottom of the bust of Washington starting a little to the right of the designer's initials and going across to the left, down into the field and I think maybe even into the left arm of the T is a line of chips/cracks It looks like it could either be a die crack, with die chips added in for fun, a series of die chips with some incidental hairlines, or maybe some sort of pre-strike lamination of the planchet. Option 3 I've tossed out being that any excess metal in the field I think would have been well flattened out, but I'm not entirely sure what's going on here. All of this is definitely raised above the field/design elements, I've looked at it from a number of different angles under the binocular scope I have.

    I've attached one image of the hairlines in the initials and the chip/crack to the left of them, the remainder (as most of my resizes are a bit too big apparently) can be found at http://clubseal.net/coins/ .

    Anyone have any thoughts on what might be going on with this? The pictures are less than perfect, if other angles are needed or particular areas detailed, please let me know and I'll get some more pictures.
    Attached Files

  • #2
    It's a blind-ended die crack studded with a few small die chips. Rather common in this area. Blind-ended die cracks begin and end within the body of the coin.
    Mike Diamond. Error coin writer and researcher.

    Comment


    • #3
      Ah, ok, I guess I should have realized logically that a die crack could happen without going to an edge, just that I've seen so many going to the edge and I don't think any completely contained I didn't process it as a possibility. Based on the design it makes sense that it'd be common in that spot, I actually thought it was just an odd edge on the beveling in that area before I looked closer. I think I'll file this under "new information gained" and some motivation to keep me checking change hopefully to find a real rarity one day. Thanks a lot for the assessment Mike, always good to learn something new.

      Comment

      Working...
      X