Ken your thinking follows Alan Herbert and both of you are stuck in the 70s. We haven't used those definitions for "error" and "variety" since the mid to late 80s. No one followed Herbert in replacing "error" with "minting variety." The hobby under Bill Fivaz and JT Stanton redefined the terms. A variety is a restrictive group which is limited to (Design changes, mintmark style changes, doubled dies, RPMs, OMMs, other mintmark irregularities, repunched dates, and misplaced dates), all of which can be proven to be on the die before it is placed into service. If it is not one of these it is defined as an "error." "Error" is no longer used in a descriptive sense. It is used as a title for anything that is not a variety. There are planchet errors, die errors, and striking errors. I teach this maxim: Varieties are born on the die and errors are created spontaneously.
Die cracks are die errors not because they are abnormal or unintentional, or acciental, but because they are not varieties. Confusion sometimes sets in for the novice because die errors can be cataloged like varieties. But this does not make them varieties. Also die errors can be cherrypicked like varieties. But again this does not make them varieties. "Variety" has a very specialized use in the hobby. It is by definition restricted to problems affecting the production of a die.
Modern collectors make this distinction. Our forum needs to reflect this distinction as well. While I take no offense at a thread about die cracks in the variety forum, it is more accurately placed in the error forum.
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