KOTCT
Worldwide Coins & Bank Notes => U.S. Coins => Topic started by: Oih82w8 on March 29, 2023, 01:22:45 PM
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I have this addiction to varieties and I can't quite shake. I was trying to complete my 7070 with varieties, but I started leaning toward eye-appeal. I still have my reference sheet of varieties to look for and I found another earlier this year. 1866 5C RPD & Obv Die Clash FS-306/401 I also attached the OBV/REV overlay to help visualize the die clash. Thank you for your interest and looking forward to comments.
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Very kool, my friend…… love them‼ï¸â€¼ï¸👍👍🎯👀‼ï¸â€¼ï¸â€¼ï¸
I’ve always loved clashed dies, I use to have a few 3-cent nickels in high grade that had cool clashing, wish I still had them‼ï¸😱High Grade 3 cents were always easy to find clashed dies.
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Die clashes are awesome. I love seeing the overlaid designs so thanks for sharing this one Oih82w8!
Regarding the FS-306/401 designation for this clash, who creates these designations and what do the letters/numbers signify?
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Those are designated by Bill Fivaz and J.T. Stanton (FS numbers).
According to the Cherry-Pickers Guide;
101-299 OBV Doubled Die
301-399 OBV Date Variety
401-499 OBV Variety Misc
501-699 Mintmark Variety
701-799 Misc Variety
801-899 REV Doubled Die
901-999 REV Variety MISC
Combinations can occur as well, like the Shield Nickel above; OBV Date Variety (Rpunched Date) AND OBV Variety MISC (OBV Clashed Die)
Thank you for your question!
John
A four-digit identifier is used for two or more major varieties