Got_4by4
Sr. Member
- Feb 9, 2009
- 352
- 132
- 🏆 Honorable Mentions:
- 1
- Detector(s) used
- Garrett AT-Pro, White's IDX/Pro, Garrett Pro-Pointer
- Primary Interest:
- All Treasure Hunting
Don't you just hate Zincolns? Check this out!
As a detectorist I always end up with crusty zincolns that won't go through Coinstar machines
or that I would be too embarrassed to turn in at the bank, I just HATE them!
That was until now......
So, we all know now that if the copper coating gets damaged, the zinc can corrode from the inside out.
There has even been examples of doing this on purpose >> Hollow Pennies | Very Tiny Things
While going through my drawers, getting ready to down size and sell my house, I found a couple of jars
of pennies I collected in 1983. Back then I was trying to find all of the 7 different varieties of the first
year of the 1982 cents. And that was when I found this: a 1982 d, small date zinc variety.
It had sit in the jar all these years, unnoticed until now.
It is NOT an error coin, in the normal sense, but what I think is a contaminated blank. It has 'blisters' that
I think is the zinc corroding but not breaking through the copper plating. I would like some more
opinions and reach a consensus to find out if it is valuable to a collector. And, what it might be worth.
I will take it to my local coin shop and try to get some better close-ups and post them later.
Here are the pics:
As a detectorist I always end up with crusty zincolns that won't go through Coinstar machines
or that I would be too embarrassed to turn in at the bank, I just HATE them!
That was until now......
So, we all know now that if the copper coating gets damaged, the zinc can corrode from the inside out.
There has even been examples of doing this on purpose >> Hollow Pennies | Very Tiny Things
While going through my drawers, getting ready to down size and sell my house, I found a couple of jars
of pennies I collected in 1983. Back then I was trying to find all of the 7 different varieties of the first
year of the 1982 cents. And that was when I found this: a 1982 d, small date zinc variety.
It had sit in the jar all these years, unnoticed until now.
It is NOT an error coin, in the normal sense, but what I think is a contaminated blank. It has 'blisters' that
I think is the zinc corroding but not breaking through the copper plating. I would like some more
opinions and reach a consensus to find out if it is valuable to a collector. And, what it might be worth.
I will take it to my local coin shop and try to get some better close-ups and post them later.
Here are the pics: