Possible repunched mintmark
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In my opinion, i am not a big nickel fan but, i believe this to be some sort of mechanical damage. The vertical crossbar is super thin and the eastern (right) side where the curve of the primary D is completely flat.
Looking at the coin, the area by the verical bar is the the left and the area near the curve of the D is to the right.
What i do in situations like this is to get some thin paper, tracing paper is best. On the screen, carefully Outline the stronger D in pencil. Then, slide that traced D and see if it lines up on the weaker D.
eaxtellcoin is an outstanding reference for nickels. If he has some free time, he might come in here and offer is opinion.
I personal do not see a match on variety vista:
I did not check
or
Die varieties such as doubled dies, Repunched mint marks (RPMs), Over Mint Marks (OMMs), Repunched Dates, Overdates, coin design varieties, as well as regular coins and error coins.
Each working die that had an rpm hammered into it the all had a slightly different location. You can look over the different mint marks on documented RPMs and see the different mint mark locations. People can do overlays to confirm or debunk rpms against known, documented examples.
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
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Originally posted by N-8194 View PostI think you correct. I did not realize the doubling could be that limited. Thank you
Think of it this way. The mint mark is hand punched into the working die. Its an extremely small hole. When the working dies squeeze that planchet into a coin, that area of the mint mark is hopefully filled with some of the coin's metal. After the coin has been squuezed, it has to leave the working dies. If its not pulled up/ejected exactly like it was put in, things can get damaged. I also believe that the depth of the mint mark has something to do with all of this. If the machine, working die or coin/planchet moves just a tad as the coin is ejected from the working dies, it probably can damage the coin.
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
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