It's the thrill of the hunt for me. I love watching your videos I learn so much and your voice is very relaxing. You explain things so everyone understands. Your explanation of the minting process helped me so much in identifying errors.
Canada used to occasionally make planchets for US coins in the 70s and 80s, maybe one of the magnetic Canadian Nickel Planchets got mixed in with a shipment of nonmagnetic US nickel planchets.
IF SO, WOULDN'T THAT MAKE IT A WRONG PLANCHET ERROR ,I THJINK I JUST NEED TO HAVE IT GRADED.1943 WAR NICKLE SHOULD BE 30% SILVER BUT IT STICKS TO A MAGNET
I have never heard of a US Five Cent magnetic coin. I do however know of several RUclips coin roll hunting channels that always check the rolls with a magnet, to separate the Canadians. Example: Ray’s World. 👍
Now that is quite interesting Daniel, I never thought about running coins under a magnet except maybe a '43 Lincoln. Very interesting coin and video. Thanks for sharing.
I've read about magnetic coins never on us Nickles Canadian nickels yes but on cents 1974 so i grabbed my magnet after seen you and tested all my nickels just now lol
It could be a poor alloy mix. This nickel may have more nickel in it than it should. The specific gravity of nickel and copper are almost identical. That would explain why the weight is the same as a normal nickel.
It would be interesting to see what it reads on an XRF Scanner. That said, are you able to contact NGC & ask them for information about it. They graded it, so someone there must know something about the coin.
I know some Canadian coins were made in Phily in the 60's or 70's but if a planchet was left over from that process it would weigh 4.5g or so. At 5.0g its too heavy for that so maybe it is just an anomaly in the planchet that has a high nickel concentration causing the magnetism.
I have two silver war time nickels that are attracted to a magnet. Both are from the Philadelphia mint a 1943 & 1942. I've been trying to find information on wrong stock magnetic errors or experimental planchets from that time and in the last four years of searching for any information your video is the closest that I have come to finding any kind of answer. Good luck!
That is a nice find, I'd find it hard to sell as well once graded like this. It would be neat to find a place with a XRF handheld scan device willing to use it on the coin through the slab to find out the exact metal composition. Some bigger scrap yards use them and some jewelry stores as well.
Shames plug for those of you that read the comments: I bought three Walking Liberty halves from Daniel - one for me and each of my boys. They were gorgeous. Easy ordering, fast shipping, and great service. I can’t recommend Portsmouth Coin enough!!
I think they just from a batch HOT on nickel, instead of just 25%. Less copper more nickel close to the same weight and magnetic. I would think that if people started checking for these you would find Millions upon millions of them in circulation still.
I'd definitely contact the mint. Considering the similar example you found, it looks like the mint was trying some new alloys out. Think I'll run a magnet over my rolls, just for the hell of it...
This is exciting news. I would maybe consider sending this to ANACS because they will do 'free metal testing'...... when you check off "varieties". So this way you can get the exact metals listed on the holder. NGC charges a lot for "metal testing"! I think around $80 dollars. But ANACS will do if you ask them to (with "varieties" checked off). This may be a very valuable nickel.
Daniel, first of all very interesting video. You seem to mention that it is attracted to a magnet, but seem to imply not overly so or that the attraction is not that strong. Since nickels are composed of 75% copper and 25% nickel, remember that nickel is actually magnetic. It is my opinion that the percentage of nickel in the composition of the metal was too high, causing the magnetism property of nickel to be displayed. This still does not explain the extremely high gloss finish nor does it explain the very poorly struck reverse, but to me this is the most likely explanation. If it were some kind of experimental planchet you’d think there would be some documentation about that somewhere, but there does not appear to be. Interested to hear your thoughts.
I can't tell how magnetic it is, but doubt more nickel would cause it to be strong enough to attact a magnet through the NCG holder. I could feel the attraction.
I once had a magnetic nickel that was part of a magic set where it would interact with a fake hollow penny and a real dime would lie underneath and you could change the penny to a dime by laying a nickel on it!
the only time ive ever heard of this kind of stuff is if an american strike was put on a magnetic planchet that was created for a foreign country (like phillipenes) that used magnetic alloy!
Not just no feedback, if you look, you see the user name has numbers at the end. I have seen many of the most randomly common coins lately listed on ebay, with user names that have zero or very low feedback, but I think they put a number in their user name to try and make people think that is their feedback. Like, currently someone with a similar user name is trying to sell "error" nickels that have a weight of 5.07 grams, which I believe is not an error, isn't that pretty much the normal weight of a nickel?
DANIEL, I WISH I COULD BUY RIGHT NOW, BUT.....WITH PRICES AS HIGH AS THEY ARE RIGHT NOW, I MAY HAVE TO QUIT COIN COLLECTING. HOPE YOU UNDERSTAND. THANK YOU FOR YOUR CHANNEL AND THE BEST OF LUCK TO YOU.
@@CoinHELPu I see, I wasn't aware that they did that, kinda makes me wonder if they did a composition test on it. Like the laser that tells the composition. Sorry I am new to the grading company aspect of these things. Lol that's why I got you to learn from here on RUclips! Lol Have a great day !😂🤣👍💯🇺🇸
As specified by NGC the Jefferson was struck on error planchet. What type of test would NGC use to validate error? Daniel, per your research the error is scarce. Possibly an intentional or accidental rare escaped test speciman? I have a couple boxes of NI coins to check!
Got a general coin question. Looking at several Lincoln cents in an Ebay auction, I noticed that several high grade coins have 2 marks right under Lincoln's collar. I noticed the 2 marks are on your 1955 double die you have for sell. While some years seem to be mark clear, others are commonly shown. Was wondering if that is a well known die mark and does it reduce or increase the value. I am new to collecting Lincolns and haven't noticed this before.
@@CoinHELPu Sorry, I did not really pay attention to the grading company just that it wasn't ANACS or lower. Thanks. Would be interesting to find out and I will now be using a magnet check on ALL my coins that I go through.
nickel is one of the 3 ferromagnetic transition metals! Ferromagnetism is the type of magnetism that everyone knows. The other ferromagnetic transition metals are iron and cobalt. Could it be that the nickel just has more nickel in its alloy than normal? If the alloy was made wrong this would explain the magnetism. A normal nickel is 25% nickel and 75% copper. To be ferromagnetic at room temperature, this type of alloy would have to be at least 56% nickel (E. H. Williams, Magnetic Properties of Copper-Nickel Alloys. Phys. Rev. 38, 828 (1931).) I believe that a mistake by a mint employee when adding the metals to melt to make alloy could explain this. I may be wrong though and it might be an experimental planchet.
But how long would it stay magnetic? I've made things magnetic on accident lol but they never stayed magnetic too terribly long, and they weren't super magnetic either... But i have no idea about what's actually possible.
all those questions you want to know bout this coin of yours are the same questions i was trying to ask you once not long ago about a coin i have in a email i sent ya Lol i wanted to rephrase every i trying to ask afterwards but you just did it for me 😆 thank you at the end of this video i thought you was gonna give a report on your coin now im just as excited bout finding out more bout your coin Lol you see Dan your vids have been resourceful to us for me atleast I just want to say thank you even just for the acknowledging that mean alot to Me ugh.. I sure wish i lived near you so I could bing it by your shop like you suggested in the your reply if i could of id been there asap lol but like i say i keep learning more and more need to say i find new discoveries intriguing on anything i find intriguing besides coins lol so gussing my next step is getting graded but then i want to know Is it worth getting grade lol after a whole year trying to get all info i wonder was is a long time?? lol am i cutt out for this kinda hobby i wonder am i the only one thats spends days weeks months a whole year on researching everything about a certain coin??? is that normal for beginners lol anyways honestly i could not find much on my coin anywhere maybe to 2 persons with similarities and my next step is sending it in to find out thank you so much keep up good work
I have an odd question for you coinhelp...if a commercial pops up during your video..does it help you to watch it and or hurt you by skipping it. Reason i ask i want to try to help folks that post good content as much as possible...thanks for your videos
I think pure nickel is possibly magnetic, so possibly, it is not, through whatever manufacturing process, 80% Cu + 20% Ni? I very much agree that rare not equal always valuable. A market must exist before this is the case.
@@CoinHELPu Ok. I have played with a few pure nickel, but foreign coins, and they were not super strong but definitely would move across the table/surface. Don't think I would give up a lot for this one although have some OMS British coins in collection.
@@ericdawson845 Some of my old coin collecting books recommended using the magnet test on certain coins. I'd be careful because I wouldn't want to damage the coin. Maybe you could put the coin under a thin piece of Teflon and then do the magnet test.
@@jeffw1267 Another point is that our nickels are mainly copper! I have some nearly pure nickel content foreign patterns that have a fairly strong magnetic pull.
@@ericdawson845 Indeed. The metal used for the United States Three Cent Nickel of 1865-1889, Five Cent Nickel of 1866 - present (excepting 1942 - 1945 'War Nickels'), and the outer layer of 1965 to present copper nickel 'clad' coinage, is 75% copper, 25% nickel.
Super cool. Please don't sell it. Hopefully mint can help. Are there and foreign coins with magnetic properties? I do know that some metals can become magnetic for a time when rubbed or subjected to pressure like being struck by a hammer or (press)?. I don't know if the mickle alloy is one of these. Again cool, I will look at mine today.
Daniel, I am a stacker so not familiar with grading. Does PCHS provide documents showing how they arrived at their conclusion? I always carry a magnet when "hunting".
Look Daniel i have a magnetizer/Demagnetizer i which i can take an item a magnetize it or the opposite. You can buy at lowe’s or Home depot very cheap $5-10
My guess and only guess Daniel, is that the planchette itself with out being struck or molded to shape might had had some type of mineral sneak in the proses mechanism....while being molded together by shape the mistake might haven’t been recognized during the proses.. that’s just my assumption, what’s yours?
Coin shop website portsmouthcoinshop.com/
i have magnetic 1961 jefferson nickel any ideal where to sell or value
It's the thrill of the hunt for me. I love watching your videos I learn so much and your voice is very relaxing. You explain things so everyone understands. Your explanation of the minting process helped me so much in identifying errors.
Thank you
Canada used to occasionally make planchets for US coins in the 70s and 80s, maybe one of the magnetic Canadian Nickel Planchets got mixed in with a shipment of nonmagnetic US nickel planchets.
IF SO, WOULDN'T THAT MAKE IT A WRONG PLANCHET ERROR ,I THJINK I JUST NEED TO HAVE IT GRADED.1943 WAR NICKLE SHOULD BE 30% SILVER BUT IT STICKS TO A MAGNET
I thank you Daniel for all you do for us collectors. I’ve been watching you for a long time and I will keep on watching!
I have never heard of a US Five Cent magnetic coin. I do however know of several RUclips coin roll hunting channels that always check the rolls with a magnet, to separate the Canadians. Example: Ray’s World. 👍
I appreciate a person who is up early and working
Thanks for another video. Morgans are my favorite coin as well.
Now that is quite interesting Daniel, I never thought about running coins under a magnet except maybe a '43 Lincoln. Very interesting coin and video. Thanks for sharing.
I've never heard about magnetic nickel , very interested, thank you for sharing.
Have a nice week !
It’s like going to a numismatic Academy! Love your videos Daniel! Keep up the good work…
I'm gonna need to start hunting with a magnet now.
I missed you Sunday at the coin show but I stopped to see your friend next to you.
Yeah, I didn't make it. Sorry
Prior to 1982 the Canadian five cent coin was minted on planchets of .999 nickel, which is ferromagnetic, but they weighed 4.54 grams.
Hey good morning Daniel you know we love you looking forward to the video and you have a great day buddy
Hello Daniel, I would like to purchase your nickel . My e Mail is. rsitch1@gmail.com I collect errors for my kids. Bob Sitchenko
Very interesting find. This is the first I have heard of this error.
Thank you
I've read about magnetic coins never on us Nickles Canadian nickels yes but on cents 1974 so i grabbed my magnet after seen you and tested all my nickels just now lol
Always Interesting content Daniel. Keep up the good work, and thanks for sharing! JJ
Hello! Beautiful coin 👌
Hello dan keep up them great videos you allways go into detail and are full of imformation. Thank you dan 🇺🇸
Love that 1955 double die.
It could be a poor alloy mix. This nickel may have more nickel in it than it should. The specific gravity of nickel and copper are almost identical. That would explain why the weight is the same as a normal nickel.
It would be interesting to see what it reads on an XRF Scanner. That said, are you able to contact NGC & ask them for information about it. They graded it, so someone there must know something about the coin.
I know some Canadian coins were made in Phily in the 60's or 70's but if a planchet was left over from that process it would weigh 4.5g or so. At 5.0g its too heavy for that so maybe it is just an anomaly in the planchet that has a high nickel concentration causing the magnetism.
I have two silver war time nickels that are attracted to a magnet. Both are from the Philadelphia mint a 1943 & 1942. I've been trying to find information on wrong stock magnetic errors or experimental planchets from that time and in the last four years of searching for any information your video is the closest that I have come to finding any kind of answer. Good luck!
@Coinhelpu Good morning sir Daniel ! That's an interesting nickel.
Interesting. Thanks Daniel..
That is a nice find, I'd find it hard to sell as well once graded like this. It would be neat to find a place with a XRF handheld scan device willing to use it on the coin through the slab to find out the exact metal composition. Some bigger scrap yards use them and some jewelry stores as well.
Shames plug for those of you that read the comments: I bought three Walking Liberty halves from Daniel - one for me and each of my boys. They were gorgeous. Easy ordering, fast shipping, and great service. I can’t recommend Portsmouth Coin enough!!
Thank you, glad you liked them!
I think they just from a batch HOT on nickel, instead of just 25%. Less copper more nickel close to the same weight and magnetic. I would think that if people started checking for these you would find Millions upon millions of them in circulation still.
Stumped! Hoping something comes forward about this!
Great information
My wife grew up in Wheeleersburg. We live outside of Denver now...
Very interesting 👍
I'd definitely contact the mint. Considering the similar example you found, it looks like the mint was trying some new alloys out. Think I'll run a magnet over my rolls, just for the hell of it...
Very unique 🔥
Interesting coin indeed!
I found a 1944 P war nickel that can be picked up with a magnet. The magnetic pull is not as strong as a steel coin
I think maybe a Canadian 5 can't planchet ?
This is exciting news. I would maybe consider sending this to ANACS because they will do 'free metal testing'...... when you check off "varieties". So this way you can get the exact metals listed on the holder. NGC charges a lot for "metal testing"! I think around $80 dollars. But ANACS will do if you ask them to (with "varieties" checked off). This may be a very valuable nickel.
NGC will do it as well or I can get an XRF
I always run a rare earth magnet across coins. You just never know.
Daniel, first of all very interesting video. You seem to mention that it is attracted to a magnet, but seem to imply not overly so or that the attraction is not that strong. Since nickels are composed of 75% copper and 25% nickel, remember that nickel is actually magnetic. It is my opinion that the percentage of nickel in the composition of the metal was too high, causing the magnetism property of nickel to be displayed. This still does not explain the extremely high gloss finish nor does it explain the very poorly struck reverse, but to me this is the most likely explanation. If it were some kind of experimental planchet you’d think there would be some documentation about that somewhere, but there does not appear to be. Interested to hear your thoughts.
I agree...maybe a special nickel alloy that's nearly pure (like Nickel 200 or Nickel 201, both of which are ferromagnetic).
I can't tell how magnetic it is, but doubt more nickel would cause it to be strong enough to attact a magnet through the NCG holder. I could feel the attraction.
That is cool i would just send it to the Auction
That is a cool error coin. I wonder how iron found it's way into the impurities.
I once had a magnetic nickel that was part of a magic set where it would interact with a fake hollow penny and a real dime would lie underneath and you could change the penny to a dime by laying a nickel on it!
We need to get you another 5k subs so you can have the full 60k . you deserve it.
the only time ive ever heard of this kind of stuff is if an american strike was put on a magnetic planchet that was created for a foreign country (like phillipenes) that used magnetic alloy!
Hey buddy, I’m interested in this coin. If you find out anymore details please keep us updated. Thanks for Sharing my friend
Very interesting. It must have been exposed to a magnetic field that magnetized the alloy, or something Let us know if you find out more.
wow!
Looks better than MS 61
Not just no feedback, if you look, you see the user name has numbers at the end. I have seen many of the most randomly common coins lately listed on ebay, with user names that have zero or very low feedback, but I think they put a number in their user name to try and make people think that is their feedback. Like, currently someone with a similar user name is trying to sell "error" nickels that have a weight of 5.07 grams, which I believe is not an error, isn't that pretty much the normal weight of a nickel?
Nice error
DANIEL, I WISH I COULD BUY RIGHT NOW, BUT.....WITH PRICES AS HIGH AS THEY ARE RIGHT NOW, I MAY HAVE TO QUIT COIN COLLECTING. HOPE YOU UNDERSTAND. THANK YOU FOR YOUR CHANNEL AND THE BEST OF LUCK TO YOU.
thats pretty cool
Possibly struck on Canadian planchette?
NCG would have labeled it that way if it was
@@CoinHELPu I see, I wasn't aware that they did that, kinda makes me wonder if they did a composition test on it. Like the laser that tells the composition. Sorry I am new to the grading company aspect of these things. Lol that's why I got you to learn from here on RUclips! Lol Have a great day !😂🤣👍💯🇺🇸
As specified by NGC the Jefferson was struck on error planchet. What type of test would NGC use to validate error? Daniel, per your research the error is scarce. Possibly an intentional or accidental rare escaped test speciman? I have a couple boxes of NI coins to check!
I don't know
Got a general coin question. Looking at several Lincoln cents in an Ebay auction, I noticed that several high grade coins have 2 marks right under Lincoln's collar.
I noticed the 2 marks are on your 1955 double die you have for sell. While some years seem to be mark clear, others are commonly shown.
Was wondering if that is a well known die mark and does it reduce or increase the value.
I am new to collecting Lincolns and haven't noticed this before.
Struck on a Canadian planchet? Canadian nickels are magnetic.
I just found a Jefferson nickel 1960 that's magnetic weighs 5.36 grams but it's bigger than a nickel and it's strongly magnetized
I have a 2005 magnetic nicke, 4.86gl and a 1980 magnetic quarter.5.7g.
Pure Nickel is magnetic
Daniel, what did PCGS website say about that registry number? Odd.
It's NGC but I didn't look it up.
@@CoinHELPu Sorry, I did not really pay attention to the grading company just that it wasn't ANACS or lower. Thanks. Would be interesting to find out and I will now be using a magnet check on ALL my coins that I go through.
nickel is one of the 3 ferromagnetic transition metals! Ferromagnetism is the type of magnetism that everyone knows. The other ferromagnetic transition metals are iron and cobalt.
Could it be that the nickel just has more nickel in its alloy than normal? If the alloy was made wrong this would explain the magnetism.
A normal nickel is 25% nickel and 75% copper.
To be ferromagnetic at room temperature, this type of alloy would have to be at least 56% nickel (E. H. Williams, Magnetic Properties of Copper-Nickel Alloys. Phys. Rev. 38, 828 (1931).)
I believe that a mistake by a mint employee when adding the metals to melt to make alloy could explain this. I may be wrong though and it might be an experimental planchet.
Just from my science experiments, anything with iron can be MADE magnetic.
But how long would it stay magnetic? I've made things magnetic on accident lol but they never stayed magnetic too terribly long, and they weren't super magnetic either... But i have no idea about what's actually possible.
Isn't there a machine that will tell the composition of metal??
That's really cool.. I was looking for your email, but i cant seem to find it. How can I contact you about purchasing this?
My email is on my website I show in all my videos, but not sure what I am going to do with it.
@@CoinHELPu I'm thinking I'd pay $200 for it, but I'm always looking for great deals so the coin must be worth more than that.
Thanks for the reply. It is a very interesting piece!
Thanks for the reply. It is a very interesting piece!
all those questions you want to know bout this coin of yours are the same questions i was trying to ask you once not long ago about a coin i have in a email i sent ya Lol i wanted to rephrase every i trying to ask afterwards but you just did it for me 😆 thank you
at the end of this video i thought you was gonna give a report on your coin now im just as excited bout finding out more bout your coin Lol you see Dan your vids have been resourceful to us for me atleast I just want to say thank you even just for the acknowledging that mean alot to Me ugh..
I sure wish i lived near you so I could bing it by your shop like you suggested in the your reply if i could of id been there asap lol but like i say i keep learning more and more need to say i find new discoveries intriguing on anything i find intriguing besides coins lol so gussing my next step is getting graded but then i want to know Is it worth getting grade lol after a whole year trying to get all info i wonder was is a long time?? lol am i cutt out for this kinda hobby i wonder am i the only one thats spends days weeks months a whole year on researching everything about a certain coin??? is that normal for beginners lol anyways honestly i could not find much on my coin anywhere maybe to 2 persons with similarities and my next step is sending it in to find out thank you so much keep up good work
I am guessing that it was found when taking a magnet to rolls of nickels to identify foreign coins. I would guess that this was stuck.
Hmm I'll be looking for that now! I think it's probably worth a couple thousand if you can find the right buyer
Anything is worth a couple thousand if you can find the right buyer. This coin will never sell for $2,000.
I agree, it's worth less than $100.
stainless steel tweezers, can and do become magnetized when used around something as small as a wrist watch.
I am a novice coin collector I want to know what some of them i have are worth. Do you evaluate? and if so how?
No I don't. You can use ebay sold auctions to find your coin's value.
Maybe the planchet has a high nickel content, I’m sure you can get access to a metal analyzer. 😎
I have an odd question for you coinhelp...if a commercial pops up during your video..does it help you to watch it and or hurt you by skipping it. Reason i ask i want to try to help folks that post good content as much as possible...thanks for your videos
Yes, it helps my channel if you watch.
@@CoinHELPu thanks for letting me know..i will make sure i do my part to help you help us. 😀
pure nickel is ferro-magnetic
I think pure nickel is possibly magnetic, so possibly, it is not, through whatever manufacturing process, 80% Cu + 20% Ni? I very much agree that rare not equal always valuable. A market must exist before this is the case.
Nickel is itself a magnetic material, though not as strong as iron. They should have run a spectroscope on the analysis.
But not enough in a nickel to be magnetically strong like this.
@@CoinHELPu Ok. I have played with a few pure nickel, but foreign coins, and they were not super strong but definitely would move across the table/surface.
Don't think I would give up a lot for this one although have some OMS British coins in collection.
@@ericdawson845 Some of my old coin collecting books recommended using the magnet test on certain coins. I'd be careful because I wouldn't want to damage the coin. Maybe you could put the coin under a thin piece of Teflon and then do the magnet test.
@@jeffw1267 Another point is that our nickels are mainly copper! I have some nearly pure nickel content foreign patterns that have a fairly strong magnetic pull.
@@ericdawson845 Indeed.
The metal used for the United States Three Cent Nickel of 1865-1889, Five Cent Nickel of 1866 - present (excepting 1942 - 1945 'War Nickels'), and the outer layer of 1965 to present copper nickel 'clad' coinage, is 75% copper, 25% nickel.
Never heard of one. If you find out what it's worth Please post the info!
Great topic but audio and video was out of sync. Hard to watch. I listened to the whole video though. :-)
Sounds like you got yourself something rare hidden in plain sight.
Maybe the unit I used to make my screwdriver head magnetic!
Super cool. Please don't sell it. Hopefully mint can help. Are there and foreign coins with magnetic properties? I do know that some metals can become magnetic for a time when rubbed or subjected to pressure like being struck by a hammer or (press)?. I don't know if the mickle alloy is one of these. Again cool, I will look at mine today.
Nickle is magnetic it could have more Nickle in in making it more magnetic
I HAVE A 1975 NICKLE MAGNERIC WITH A BATH OF GOLD COLOR
IHAVE A 1975 D MAGNETIC GOLD COLOR
Gud day i had one pc 1979 5 cent n also 1940 can i sell it? Thanks
I never would have thought to test magnetism. I’ll run a rare earth magnet over my jeffersons
Dont have a magnetic one but have one that you can see the head coming through the building on other side
Daniel, I am a stacker so not familiar with grading. Does PCHS provide documents showing how they arrived at their conclusion? I always carry a magnet when "hunting".
No they don't
Look Daniel i have a magnetizer/Demagnetizer i which i can take an item a magnetize it or the opposite. You can buy at lowe’s or Home depot very cheap $5-10
I recall the US Mint has struck coins for so many other countries. Could this have been struck on a foreign planchet?
No, it would have be labeled as such.
I am interested in purchasing your magnetic nickel.
i have a 1961 magnetic nickel for sale
Too rare to be a variety. I'd keep it if I were you. It probably won't fetch much money anyway. It's cool.
Mint error, not a variety, those are two different things.
Thank you for the clarification. I appreciate it.
I'm willing to purchase it
Not sure I am selling
Did NGC grade any others?
Nope
I just went over to couch collectibles they had a Jefferson nickel stuck on steel penny.It sold for 2600.00.Thought tell u so u should get alot
I don't believe this is the same thing.
I have this.sir.1979 5 cents
My guess and only guess Daniel, is that the planchette itself with out being struck or molded to shape might had had some type of mineral sneak in the proses mechanism....while being molded together by shape the mistake might haven’t been recognized during the proses.. that’s just my assumption, what’s yours?
The alloy has more nickel than usual, nickel is magnetic.
I have a $1 star note but one of the stars (*) does not have the Top of the star. It is a misprint or error. Is it worth more because of this error???
Well, if there's 1 there's more, since it's not fake.
Hello