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Australia 1956 Penny DDR
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KurtS
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PostPosted: Sun Oct 26, 2008 11:58 am Reply with quote

Here's an Australian Penny which I've tentatively identified as a doubled die reverse, although I'm unsure which class of doubling this would be. Confused

There are a few interesting details, such as where the "doubled tops of STR (see photo) are nicely aligned, yet there's a dramatic offset at the bottoms of the letters.
Perhaps the tops are only MD? I particularly like that ghost K above the designer's K.G Very Happy



Last edited by KurtS on Mon Oct 27, 2008 1:35 pm; edited 1 time in total
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eagames
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PostPosted: Sun Oct 26, 2008 1:53 pm Reply with quote

I'm thinking the same, the tops of STR look like strike doubling but the rest of it looks like it might be a wide spread doubled die.

I'm not certain, the rest has such a wide spread you'd think it would be known. Could be a double strike? (not strike doubled)

Also the denticles look strange, is it normal to have that pattern of denticles with narrow bars in between?

Smile

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KurtS
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PostPosted: Sun Oct 26, 2008 2:43 pm Reply with quote

Interesting thought! If this were a double strike, should we expect to see a more consistent secondary image, since the die to planchet are roughly parallel upon striking? Confused For instance, would I expect to see both letters of the designer's initials doubled vs only the "K"? Shouldn't the date be doubled as well? I'd like to learn more...I've posted some additional details below. Yes, the denticles are normal; Australia used several types on their predecimals.

By contrast, I recall reading where Australian penny die blanks have a strong convex mating surface prior to hubbing, which might explain how doubling appears in a fairly narrow perimeter on this coin? I don't know the mechanics, so perhaps an expert here can help me understand. As a cross-reference, here's a detail from a well-known DDO on the AUS 1962 Penny--look at that offset! Shocked



A close-up of the date:



One more detail showing anomalies in the roo not present on my other '56 pennies. It sure helps this coin is a higher grade. Very Happy



Last edited by KurtS on Mon Oct 27, 2008 1:37 pm; edited 1 time in total
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coop
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PostPosted: Sun Oct 26, 2008 3:58 pm Reply with quote

Could some of the lower marks on the letters be die clash marks? They don't seem to line up much with the devices from the die? An overlay might help. But both images aren't there of the obverse and reverse, also the alignment of the dies? Like US Coins or medal alignment?
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KurtS
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PostPosted: Sun Oct 26, 2008 4:25 pm Reply with quote

Coop-
I agree there are some anomalies in the secondary markings, although I don't exactly know what to expect from a Aus DDR vs a clash--obviously, I should do an overlay to get some insight here. I do see some correlation to shapes in the KG, star, roo, and several letters pictured, such as S, L, and PE in PENNY. I'll mull this one over further...thanks for helping my brain work harder! Laughing
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KurtS
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PostPosted: Sun Oct 26, 2008 7:30 pm Reply with quote

As an update, an experienced collector in Australia did an overlay and could not get the marks to match a die clash. His conclusion is a strongly doubled die--but I'm still going to check this out further. Thanks for all your comments! Very Happy

Last edited by KurtS on Mon Oct 27, 2008 1:39 pm; edited 1 time in total
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Dick
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PostPosted: Sun Oct 26, 2008 7:49 pm Reply with quote

kurt, I had the same impression, that Coop had. A
clash, but at the same time I also thought a die crsck on the lower area of the letters might be possible. I can't rule out the doubling, even tho it is very wide. nice shots of a nice coin!
Dick

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daggit
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PostPosted: Sun Oct 26, 2008 8:00 pm Reply with quote

Well of course I wouldn't have a clue Laughing but I like it anyway Kurt.
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KurtS
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PostPosted: Sun Oct 26, 2008 10:25 pm Reply with quote

Here is my overlay. I re-shot the coin to ensure the scale between obverse/reverse was very close. Fortunately, two denticles almost exactly align obv/rev--the result should be fairly accurate:



Obverse as reference for devices:

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KurtS
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PostPosted: Sun Oct 26, 2008 11:54 pm Reply with quote

Judging from the last overlay, a die clash seems unlikely, but what about a DDR? Can an overlay confirm the positions of these secondary features? To that end, I've created one more overlay using the same reverse photo without speculating on distortions which may happen in a double-hubbing--only rotation of the secondary reverse image. Here I see many consistencies to these marks on this coin. Very Happy

Take a close look, keeping in mind that the secondary marks are doubled too. I've also included a clean reverse image if anyone would like to create their own overlay.



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KurtS
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PostPosted: Mon Oct 27, 2008 11:32 am Reply with quote

Here's one additional note on die production by an Australian collector on another site. If you're familiar with the Aus 1d 1933/2 "overdate," it's interesting to note how that was creating by hubbing of dies for two dates--and not the "classic" overdate scenario seen on 19C. coins. Very Happy

Quote:
I am quite sure you are perfectly correct about the DDR. When creating a die, the first blow from the transfer punch only created an imprint roughly 3/4 of the way out to the rim (which is why the 1933/2 overdate penny only shows the top of the 2 - the dies were created by one blow from a 1932 dated transfer punch and then two form a 1933 dated punch).


Last edited by KurtS on Mon Oct 27, 2008 3:02 pm; edited 1 time in total
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eagames
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PostPosted: Mon Oct 27, 2008 2:26 pm Reply with quote

I lean towards your original thought, it's MD on STR but the rest is a DDR. Still I'm not 100% sure.

The thing that makes me think so is it does seem to line up with a CW rotation and even shows the same on PENNY. (CW means the stronger second image is CW of the partial first image). I might be missing what does not match. Please point it out if you can.

A wild guess, just food for thought.........

The convex die surface might explain why it shows on the outside areas. MAYBE slight chance if the first hubbing was a 1955 hub and they removed the date or last digit from the hub before using it. (or polished any trace of it away from the die before the next hubbing) That might explain it since the doubling only showed near the rim so with the last digit removed it might not show doubling on the date. That's a bit far fetched but MAYBE Wink

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KurtS
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PostPosted: Mon Oct 27, 2008 3:00 pm Reply with quote

Quote:
...I might be missing what does not match. Please point it out if you can.

Yes, I understand how this overlay can be a bit confusing, and it's very likely my knowledge of this series helped me arrive at my tentative conclusion, which I now consider more certain--with the help of an Australian collector.

At this point, I feel that adding more arrows to call out confirming details, or erasing confusing items might create signal:noise problems or sampling bias. So I'll simply leave things with my two overlays and the original obv/rev shots; others are welcome to compare these and reach their own conclusions. I've done enough here to satisfy my curiosity--not to 100% certainty, but I can live with that. Very Happy

Here I'm reasonably confident that I'm seeing a DDR, which is confirmed by the analogous details of the well-known 1962 DDO pictured above, as well as insights by an Australian collector, appended to the quote above.

As you wondered, this may possibly involve two different hubs. When I created the last overlay, I found there are fairly tight correlations between nearby devices which slowly diverge over the full width of the coin. I think the correlation still exists, but I don't know the cause for this drift--whether it represents two different hubs or one hub (or die) which distorted between hubbings. Going further here would require very specialized knowledge which I don't possess.

Thanks again for your input and insights! Very Happy
When I get more info from the Aussies, I'll resume this topic.
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