By CoinLink on Monday, August 27, 2007Filed Under: Errors, Modern US Coins, US Coins, What's New
Back in April we reported on Butch Parrish of Virginia finding a planchet in a roll of Philadelphia George Washington Presidential dollars. Now another Numismatic News reader, Thomas P. Van Zeyl of Illinois reports finding a planchet in a roll of 2007 Washington dollars from Denver.
Van Zeyl supplied an image of the planchet, seen to have the raised upset rim diagnostic to a planchet, which is the proper term for a blank after it has been run through the upset mill or rimmer.

By CoinLink on Thursday, July 26, 2007Filed Under: Errors, Modern US Coins, US Coins
Collectors are continuing to find variations on the 2007 John Adams Presidential dollars. Aside from the obvious activity on the double edge inscription and plain edge errors, one of the more frequent variations I am getting questions about is what appears to be two different font sizes being used for the edge inscriptions. Some of the coins appear to have smaller inscriptions than others. The smaller inscriptions are crisp with their lowest points tapering to a “V” while the larger inscriptions are wider and shallower with flat bottoms where a texture can often be seen.
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By CoinLink on Sunday, July 15, 2007Filed Under: Auction News, Errors, Top Stories, US Coins
Dallas, TX: During World War II, copper was in short supply. Vital to the war effort for everything from ammunition to military equipment, the US Mint researched alternative metals from which one-cent coins could be made, thus increasing the supply of copper for military purposes. Various metals were explored, as well as plastics, but eventually zinc-coated steel was decided upon. All three mints – Philadelphia, Denver and San Francisco – produced these coins in 1943, but problems with the new metal were soon discovered, including a tendency to rust and their confusion with dimes, and the zinc-coated steel production was abandoned the following year in favor of salvaged brass shell casings augmented with pure copper. (more…)