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DDR or MDR guaranteed
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DDR or MDR guaranteed
Hello again. I went through 7 rolls of 1950’s wheats today searching for the infamous 1955 DDD. I have to report it is still hiding in an unopened roll. Lol. But I did find this 55 D that of course I can find no attribution/variety for, but thought I’d share the error. Opinions are welcome.
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In my opinion, this is all mechanical doubling or strike doubling.
It is worthless damage.
That E shows classic machine doubling.
The E height is half its normal width.
Bring all that area up and it's a normal letter.
None of the letters are thicker. They are normal.
All the letters are damaged due to shelf, strike or machine doubling.
No notching of the letters.
No cookie cutter lines where one impression is over the top of the other.
Add in the fact that none of the Denver coins in the 1950s produced a DDR. That can be looked up at
Last edited by MintErrors; 09-11-2022, 08:42 PM.Gary Kozera
Website: https://MintErrors.org
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Originally posted by MintErrors View PostIn my opinion, this is all mechanical doubling or strike doubling.
It is worthless damage.
That E shows classic machine doubling.
The E height is half its normal width.
Bring all that area up and it's a normal letter.
None of the letters are thicker. They are normal.
All the letters are damaged due to shelf, strike or machine doubling.
No notching of the letters.
No cookie cutter lines where one impression is over the top of the other.
Add in the fact that none of the Denver coins in the 1950s produced a DDR. That can be looked up at
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My logic is simple; if something is seen, and it is not listed after a decade or more, there is a pretty good chance that it is not what the person thinks it is.
Best attribution is your own, simply research the data and make a determination of what you see, since the person has the coin in hand.
New discoveries are found, but at an extremely low percentage.
I cannot give you an accurate level of machine/mechanical doubling to doubled dies, but it is probably safe to say in roll searching the number would be at LEAST 500+ machine/mechanical doubling to one potential doubled die. My gut tells me to add a few zeroes onto the machine/mechanical doubling number, but I wanted to stay conservative.
https://doubleddie.com - John Wexler's site has a wealth of info. The "worthless doubling" area shows some comparisons between a DDO/DDR and worthless doubling.Gary Kozera
Website: https://MintErrors.org
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Originally posted by MintErrors View PostMy logic is simple; if something is seen, and it is not listed after a decade or more, there is a pretty good chance that it is not what the person thinks it is.
Best attribution is your own, simply research the data and make a determination of what you see, since the person has the coin in hand.
New discoveries are found, but at an extremely low percentage.
I cannot give you an accurate level of machine/mechanical doubling to doubled dies, but it is probably safe to say in roll searching the number would be at LEAST 500+ machine/mechanical doubling to one potential doubled die. My gut tells me to add a few zeroes onto the machine/mechanical doubling number, but I wanted to stay conservative.
https://doubleddie.com - John Wexler's site has a wealth of info. The "worthless doubling" area shows some comparisons between a DDO/DDR and worthless doubling.
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