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Double D mint mark on a 1964 Washington quarter?


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I really don't know, I am sorry. My knowledge about mint errors is very close to 0.

To be honest, I have never paid attention at these small details. I am more a stacker than a collector, even in my stack are many circulated silver coin from all around the world.

 

 

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I would be careful as many US coins have mint marks that have been faked to change them from being made in one location to being made in a different location due to the other being more valuable. 

That said, there is another coin on ebay for 1964 Denver Mint Quarter with a Double Die on the D mint mark.

 

https://www.ebay.com/itm/114727123533

 

That said, the best thing to do is grade to authenticate the Double Die on the mint mark with pcgs or NGC. They will confirm its authentic or a fake DD with a details grade if its fake or a small premium if its authentic, though overall coin grade might determine value and premium. 

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So far the information I have found is..it could be a ‘RPM’ which is a Repunched Mint Mark. Mint marks were applied separately and before the blanks were struck with the coin die. This is why the mint mark has a double and the lettering elsewhere seems fine.
After 1989 the mint marks were on the coin dies.
https://www.error-ref.com/repunched-mintmark/

 

WEB:  http://www.riverbanksilver.com/     INSTAGRAM @riverbanksilver

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19 hours ago, Mrpound said:

 

5 minutes ago, RiverbankSilver said:

So far the information I have found is..it could be a ‘RPM’ which is a Repunched Mint Mark. Mint marks were applied separately and before the blanks were struck with the coin die. This is why the mint mark has a double and the lettering elsewhere seems fine.
After 1989 the mint marks were on the coin dies.
https://www.error-ref.com/repunched-mintmark/

 

That’s what I thought 😊 that’s the link to pcgs coin facts 😬

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1 minute ago, Mrpound said:

 

That’s what I thought 😊 that’s the link to pcgs coin facts 😬

I’m going to send it to NGC I think. I don’t think it will be worth anything to be honest. Great fun finding out though 😁

WEB:  http://www.riverbanksilver.com/     INSTAGRAM @riverbanksilver

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11 hours ago, tpcob303 said:

I would be careful as many US coins have mint marks that have been faked to change them from being made in one location to being made in a different location due to the other being more valuable. 

That said, there is another coin on ebay for 1964 Denver Mint Quarter with a Double Die on the D mint mark.

 

https://www.ebay.com/itm/114727123533

 

That said, the best thing to do is grade to authenticate the Double Die on the mint mark with pcgs or NGC. They will confirm its authentic or a fake DD with a details grade if its fake or a small premium if its authentic, though overall coin grade might determine value and premium. 

This.

A society grows great when old men plant trees whose shade they know they will never sit in.

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