1987 Error Quarter
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posting the images of both sides. i have heard that there are only four such coins made due to wrong die
Quarter Error Coins List
configuration in 1987-88. Can you please evaluate the worth/price if i sellthis quarter dollar.. Posted by kanu at 4:40 AM 4 comments: Email ThisBlogThis!Share to TwitterShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest Home Subscribe to: Posts (Atom) Followers Blog Archive ▼ 2010 (1) ▼ October (1) mint error quarter dollar About Me kanu View my complete profile Simple template. Powered by Blogger.
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Error Coins To Look For
Coin Doc Coin Doc's Archives U.S. Coins & Currency World Coins & Currency General Ask the Coin Doc History of U.S. Coins The dime error list History of U.S. Coins Commemoratives Classic U.S. Commemoratives Exceptional Coins Exceptional U.S. Coins Numismatically Speaking Articles & Opinions World Coins World Coins - History British Coins Canadian Coins Resources Recommended Dealers Precious Metals U.S. Error Coin Values What's http://1987quartererror.blogspot.com/ My Error Coin Worth? Prices for United States Error Coins Note: The approximate prices listed below are for the most common U.S. coin errors and have been collected from auction results, dealer buy/sell lists and standard numismatic publications. To learn how errors occur, see U.S. Mint Error Coins Off Center Strikes Coins that have been struck outside the collar that holds the coin in place when it is struck. The coin is incorrectly centered with part of the http://coinsite.com/us-error-coin-values/ design missing. Coin 20-40% 40-90% Indian Cent (1859-1909) $40 $75 Lincoln Cents (copper) (1909-1982) $5. $5. Lincoln Cents (zinc) (1982- ) $2. $2. Steel Cents (1943) $100. $500 - $750. Liberty Nickels (1883-1912) $100-$200. $250 - $700. Buffalo Nickels (1913-1938) $200 - $350. $375 - $450. Jefferson Nickels (1938 - ) $3 -$5. $3-$5. War Time Nickels (1942-45) $50 - $125. $175 - $350. Barber Dimes (1892-1916) $100 -$200. $250 - $350. Mercury Dimes (1916-1945) $50 - $200. $225 - $325. Roosevelt Dimes (1945-1964) $35 - $75. $75 - $50. Roosevelt Dimes (1965- ) $5 - $10. $6 - $5. Washington Quarter (1932 - 1964) $75 - $160. $180 - $300. Washington Quarter (1965- ) $5 - $30. $30 - $100. Franklin Half Dollar (1948-1963) $300 - $400. $400 - $600. Kennedy Half Dollar 1964 $100 - $250. $300 - $400. Kennedy Half Dollar (1965- 1969) $150 - $200. $300 - $400. Kennedy Half Dollar 1970 Rare Rare Kennedy Half Dollar (1971- ) $35 - $60. $75 - $100. Morgan Dollar (1878 - 1904), 1921 $500 - $4000. Unknown Peace Dollar (1921-1935) ? ? Eisenhower Dollar (1971-1978) $200 - $750. $1000 -$600. Susan B. Anthony Dollar (1979-81),1999 $50 - $100 $400 - $300. Clipped Planchets (coin blanks) Coins that are incomplete due to improperly cut blanks. If the steel rod that punches out blanks overlaps a pr
Print: You could have rare pennies in your pocket worth hundreds or even thousands of dollars. These days, plenty of these collectible coins are back in circulation, thanks to the popularity http://bottomlineinc.com/you-may-have-these-rare-coins-and-valuable-pennies-in-your-pocket/ of automatic coin-counting machines that encourage people to gather up the old coins http://koinpro.tripod.com/Articles/finding_states_quarters_errorsa_.htm they have around the house and turn them into paper bills for spending. You can profit big by inspecting old coins—if you know which coins actually are worth much more than their face value. FAVORITE COINS In addition to searching through your own coin jar for the rare coins described below, make a habit quarter error of checking each time you are given change. People typically are able to find coins worth $10 to $50 fairly easily in their first year of collecting, while a coin valued in the hundreds or thousands of dollars can take several years of looking. Example: Any dimes, quarters, half-dollars and dollars minted in 1964 or earlier (when they still were made with 90% silver rather than little or 1987 error quarter no silver with a mix of copper and nickel) are worth more than face value. For instance, pre-1965 one-dollar coins are worth at least $19 and quarters are worth at least $3.50. One way to start your search is by looking for the popular coins mentioned below. Pennies 1943 copper Lincoln penny is one of the most sought-after coins—about 40 have been found. That year, the US Mint switched to making pennies from zinc-coated steel instead of 95% Âcopper/5% zinc and tin, but by mistake some copper pennies still were made, and those may be worth $10,000 to $100,000, or even $1 million in pristine condition. Helpful: Hold a magnet up to your 1943 pennies. If any aren't attracted, you may have a very valuable find. "Doubled-die" Lincoln penny. Look for noticeable doubling in the inscriptions "Liberty"…"In God We Trust"…and/or the date. Years include 1955 (estimated value: $1,000 and up)…1972 ($200 to $800)…and 1995 ($5 and up). 1984 and 1997 "double-ear" Lincoln pennies. A doubling during the minting process gave Abe Lincoln's engraved portrait an extra earlobe. Estimated value: $25 to $250. Nickels  1964-D Jefferson nickel with misspelled motto. The middle word in "E Pluribus Unum" on the reverse side of t
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by Ken Potter NLG October 22, 2000 All text & photos © Ken Potter 2000 A unique area of opportunity available to collectors of error coins is in the unsearched bags of "Statehood Commemorative quarters" that the United States Mint has been selling direct to collectors since the launch of that program in 1999. Unsearched bags can also be obtained through private dealers. While the vast majority of odd-size or otherwise misshapen errors, get caught by the Mints inspection and sorting processes, a few do escape the system into bulk bags of coin. Normally, most of those "escapees" get caught by privately operated coin wrapping operations during the process of rolling the coins into the familiar tubes we see in cash drawers. Those persons, in turn, supply error dealers with most of the new errors that we see offered each year. The Mints decision to sell these quarters in bulk, direct to the collector, means that the valuable error coins that banks and other coin wrapping operations virtually monopolized upon for decades, are now available to you! While, Mint-sewn bags of coin have always been available, collectors often had to know the right person in a bank or have a large enough account to be granted the favor of obtaining a few of these bags. The alternative was to purchase them from dealers at hefty premiums, which in the current market must be viewed as "reasonable" since these bags have been steadily increasing in value. Today, unsearched bags of States quarters can be obtained directly from the Mint for a modest fee plus shipping charges. Each bag represents an opportunity of possibly finding a valuable error coin (or more) that could net you hundreds or even thousands of dollars! These bags represent a golden opportunity to the collector because the bulk sales program comes at a time when more errors than ever are being produced, (due to high coinage output demands on the Mint), and at a time when State quarter errors are, unquestionably, the most active area in the error coin market. While it might at first seem that increased supplies of errors would be counterproductive to the market, the fact is they represent a significant number of diverse error types - some very rare - that have been well distributed amongst the commemorative designs introduced thus far, (five State quarter designs are being issued each year for ten years). Furthermore, each design represents a one-year-of-type or perhaps what, one observer states, might be better described as a "two-months-of-