coopExpert Member
Posts: 3402 Joined: 17 Sep 2003 Location: Arizona
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Posted: Mon Feb 04, 2008 9:57 am |
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I see two different light sources on your image. One above and one below. With that type of lighting everthing looks larger. The best is to have just one light source. If you are getting unwanted light, remove one. I use a facial tissue to block the unwanted light. How do you know when you have a second light source? By placing your hand around your scope to block out unwanted light. When you determine the direction, curtain that off with a facial tissue with tape/piece of carboard just to block the unwanted/secondary light source. Try to nail this down and look again. Sometimes the dual lighting is the problem. But you need this correcting first to see if your coin is a doubled die. (Also compare to more normal coins.)Why? Because designs obverse/reverse change from year to year. Sometimes every 1/2 year. So examining coins from the same year/type will answer if this is common. (IE: 1959 Cents the 5 on the date has a notch on the center cross piece. They all have that, just part of the design. 1961 on the upper tail of the six in the date has a missing part of the tail. Normal as they all have that. 2001-2003 Have the wider letters/numbers. They all have this. You just need to compare to see if other coins contain the same anomoly to see what is the norm for this years/type of coins.
_________________ Richard S. Cooper
You may be only one person in the world, but you may also be the world to one person.
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