Fort McHenry quarter with a silver side and a gold side
Collapse
X
-
In my opinion, its either a coin which has one side with toning, something that happens and quite common. The other is a possible attempt at electroplating. A few others is some sort of chemical reaction, stained or other condition..
Look at the obverse of coin where IN GOD WE TRUST. Whatever this is, it also bled from the reverse to the obverse. Have a look at the reeded edge and see if the gold color is there. See if it affects some or all of the reeded edge.
On the reverse just past the word McHENRY, some of the goldish color has come off, exposing the normal color of the coin.
Weight of suspect coins is vital. It will help assess what the coin might be. Scales which display down to the hundredth of a gram is better (#.## g). If the coin was electroplated, the additional metal is so thin that it should not affect the weight too much. The weights of the us coins has a tolerance range, and its best to have a chart handy as weight of a coin is not an exact science.Last edited by MintErrors; 10-28-2025, 08:19 AM.
My signature block :
Three helpful posts:
How to take better photos with a Cellphone:
https://board.conecaonline.org/forum...th-a-cellphone
RPM or DDO question? Help us help YOU:
https://board.conecaonline.org/forum...lp-us-help-you
What Forum to post your coin questions:
https://board.conecaonline.org/forum...t-forum-to-use
Gary Kozera
Website: https://MintErrors.org
-

Comment