Yes, Daniel. I am STRUGGLING with DD’s 😂😂 I appreciate the content! I am a newbie (3years in the hobby) but getting serious about it now ❤ I love and appreciate the numismatic family❤❤
One of the greatest videos I've seen that explains what a doubled die is. Very well produced and thank you for the clear, close-up images, really makes a big difference.
I’ve been collecting for around two to three years now and this video helped me finally get a hand on differentiating between actual DDOs and just machine doubling. Thanks for another great video Daniel!
Thanks for the awesome video. I got a digital microscope for Christmas and this video definitely helps me out in looking for double die coins. I do have 3 1955 pennies with minor doubling on them to practice with. I hope you will do more videos on detecting errors with a digital microscope.
I'm still not grasping it completely. However, I am slowly getting better at it, thanks to your help in posting these videos, sharing your expertise. A big problem that confuses me is when I look on sites selling coins as doubled dies, and I don't think they are, but I'm not 100% sure, there is where my biggest problem lies. Blessings, Louis
Dear sir, BEST VIDEO !!! Nice job for all the mob. Yes. 2 years looking at pennies with a 1980 mag. Glass. However, today I just received a micro scope.! But that short was great great! more,more,more.no bull .Thanks.
@@dennisgareau7259 Thank you ! Now that I can look it up, sent it to PCGS (42671710) through my LCS. It graded low at a F15 BN but no mistake it was a Doubled Die FS101. I sold it to a Dealer friend several years back.
I just bought an uncirculated 2000 P Massachusetts Quarter, doubled motto " In God We Trust " - On auction at Ebay for $9.95. This coin displays dramatic doubling on the lettering of IN GOD WE TRUST. Only one die produced this error, that means very few doubled motto coins were struck. Of that original mintage most have been worn, lost, or damaged, by twenty two years in circulation. I think I got a great deal! And thanks for this video, I just got into error coins and this vid helps me out tremendously!!!!!!
WooHoo, thanks again Daniel. I looked through my recent find of my old collection: NGC 1972 double die 1972 1 cent MS 65 RD and PCGS 1984 MS 66RD 1 cent Double Die. Still hunting for my big box full of Whitman simple blue coin holder books for my Indians and older stuff, thought I had an 1877.
I have found that most of what I thought was a double die, ended up being shadows caused by the light on my microscope. Turning the coins solved most of my issues, but not all.
Great information video Daniel. This is a must for everyone to watch and learn the difference of double die and mechanical die. Keep showing the way Daniel and have a great New Year.
Strike doubling is more appropriate since it defines when this happens. Machine doubling could mean a machine outside the mint, but the die isn’t a machine. Mechanical doubling is even better than machine doubling.
The problem some of us have is AGE. I cannot see the doubling without a scope. BUT I only look at those that doubling have already been found. So that means I will never find a discovery coin. But it is fun looking.
Good Morning Daniel you have always explain things more clearly than most appreciate this so much,I have 3 mint sets 1977s 2-1985 sets all of the coins have errors you'd think they being mint sets they would be perfect .
This can be very confusing and complicated as I'm learning. I try to get it right when I look at them. Most of what I think I see I refer to as pmds because I still struggle with some of them.
I have a 72 D Lincoln Cent with what I call a "Funny Farm" Font. The lettering on the Obverse looks like it is "ballooned" out. Been trying to find info on it and I believe this video has answered my question. I think now it definitely is a doubled die coin. I appreciate this kind of info because I'm one of those that wasn't well versed on double die coins. And I've been collecting coins for decades!
This is fabulous information Daniel !!! Speaking from experience and learning from video and books I easily make those mistakes. Now I check recheck LoL and recheck again.if still not sure then I set it aside until I can determine what it is I'm looking at . Very helpful!!!
That is an excellent microscope what kind is it? Your instruction is perfect I couldn't figure out what was doubled and what was machine doubling. Thank you
Hand punching mint marks seems like ALOT of Extra work And as well as ALOT of room for Error…Astho we see today in Our Hobby! THANK YOU TO THE MINTS FOR DOING MORE WORK THAN WAS NECESSARY!
I know this is off topic but I’ve been trying for over a week to join the coin community and it won’t let me. Never had so much trouble registering on a site before. So then it said “contact board administrator which I did last week but today when I tried, it said it was “disabled”. You are so thorough and explain things in a way I (a super newbie) can understand. I so appreciate all these videos! But I have questions and wanted to post in the community. Thanks for any help! 😊
It doesn’t make sense, you click register, follow the prompts, enter an email and password and done. I join sites all the time and mine is the same as any other, except the ones that allow people to login using their social meadow account. I use the same things as all websites.
Here it is. If you’re new to numismatics and are full steam ahead looking for Doubled Dies. You’ll find probably 200 you think are, and then one day you’ll find an actual Doubled Die and immediately know how wrong you’ve been…
I do not hate doubled dies! I love doubled dies! I have a lot of very nice high prifile doubled dies. I believe what throws a lot of people off with confusion is because of the many different class doublings of course with die deterioration and machine doubling.
Daniel, horizontal shifting or die doubling saturated Lincolns in the late 60's and early 70's especially from San Francisco. Whatever caused the horizontal shift such as a minute vibration or a loose hub, the die REMAINED DOWN, so the date looks like it was scraped and moved over. Double dies REQUIRE the die to go up and down TWO SEPARATE TIMES, and metal is forced into the die two separate times offset, so the effect is VERTICAL DISPLACEMENT which is three dimensional. Die doubling is just two dimensional.
You're NOT correct, the die is already doubled when it is created by the Master Die, the coin is not doubled from the strike or movement from the die at all. A doubled die IS NOT a double struck coin or "two separate times", as you stated, this is the kind of misinformation that confuses collectors.
I don’t recommend a microscope until one knows what they’re looking at. You will see things that will just confuse you and get you hyped up over minor anomalies.
Brother you're awesome. I did learn something. I have a 1936 Penny. were half of the date, the bottom part. is smeared like butter. And other parts of the coin. On a scale of 1 to 10.. it's about a 8. ✌️💙🏇🏇🏇 ( How do I get you some pictures??)
You should give the name of your company or website Clearly. I tried to find it and couldn't. Close caption and reading the transcript didn't either. Thanks😊
Even though I have no idea about anything YET .. I have a weird reason for trying to grasp these things. so the explanation makes sense if using the dough comparison.. is it like..a piece of dough being placed on top of another exact piece of dough but the edges are not lined up exactly, a little askew. so the second piece not only adds to the hieght of it, but measured out all together, the width also? I still don't know why it's more valuable but that's just me being new. The less valuable one is dough that was just pressed with a cookie cutter but some dough remnants were left on the counter but not still part of the dough if you picked it up? 😭 I'm trying
You got to learn doubled dies before using a microscope. I highly recommend not getting until you know the minting process and about how mint errors occur and what they look like.
Hey that 72 Lincoln cent 1st one it almost looked like the fs-104? Is it? Sorry but i couldn't help notice the L in Liberty. I didnt get a really good view of it but if so thats a very nice dd i believe the most rare of the 72s.
You’re mistaken. I have my doubled dies graded, I see them I person. You’re looking at images thinking they look the same as strike doubling but that’s not the case.
yes where i question my finds and when i try to send or attempt to send pictures of what i have found . i have to go through all kinds of places just to get a simple answer to what i ask or show. where has Simplicity the non complicated way to talk or show something go?
We have a step by step guide and a video on how to post a topic, there's no way to make it easier. coinauctionshelp.com/welcome-to-coinhelpu-community/
Here's the help community to ask questions and post images coinauctionshelp.com/welcome-to-coinhelpu-community/ We don't grade your coins using images and tell you if you should send them off.
Daniel, when I take my glasses off, all my coins are double dies.
When I leave mine on everything is doubled. Wanna critique each other's collection? 🤣
You and me both😂
I feel ya
😂😢😮
You guys gotta lay off the booze 😂
I look through a ton of coins and don't even really look for doubling because I don't understand it at all. This video helped a lot!
Yes, Daniel. I am STRUGGLING with DD’s 😂😂 I appreciate the content! I am a newbie (3years in the hobby) but getting serious about it now ❤ I love and appreciate the numismatic family❤❤
One of the greatest videos I've seen that explains what a doubled die is. Very well produced and thank you for the clear, close-up images, really makes a big difference.
It has been the hardest thing to grasp for me about coin collecting. Thank you for this video!
Another excellent teaching video Daniel. DD's and MD can be tough to differentiate between sometimes. Great comparisons. Thanks for sharing.
I have that problem as well deciding weather it is in fact a DD or MD, it's pretty tough to tell sometimes
I’ve been collecting for around two to three years now and this video helped me finally get a hand on differentiating between actual DDOs and just machine doubling. Thanks for another great video Daniel!
Hi... Sir... i have a many..coins..like those...errors...!!!?.. if..everyone..interested...😊❤
Thank you for these videos. I really appreciate it. I will be watching these videos over and over 🙌🏻!!!
FANTASTIC! Exceptional delivery for a not so easy subject. Thank you for another gem.
Thanks for the awesome video. I got a digital microscope for Christmas and this video definitely helps me out in looking for double die coins. I do have 3 1955 pennies with minor doubling on them to practice with. I hope you will do more videos on detecting errors with a digital microscope.
I'm still not grasping it completely. However, I am slowly getting better at it, thanks to your help in posting these videos, sharing your expertise. A big problem that confuses me is when I look on sites selling coins as doubled dies, and I don't think they are, but I'm not 100% sure, there is where my biggest problem lies.
Blessings,
Louis
So you can prob tell by looking at the copper coating on post 1982 pennies. Once you explained and showed it, it became very clear. Thanks!
Play-dough is how professor peavey explained the difference as well. Worked well for me. Thanks as always
Yes and he got the idea from Bill Fivav.
@@CoinHELPu now I have to see that one. Was he a natural born teacher too?
Dear sir, BEST VIDEO !!! Nice job for all the mob. Yes. 2 years looking at pennies with a 1980 mag. Glass. However, today I just received a micro scope.! But that short was great great! more,more,more.no bull .Thanks.
Thanks Daniel. Excellent video. It does take time to learn doubled dies but it can be done! I have found several. My best was a 1917 Lincoln cent.
1917 Lincoln sent DDO excellent find
@@dennisgareau7259 Thank you ! Now that I can look it up, sent it to PCGS (42671710) through my LCS. It graded low at a F15 BN but no mistake it was a Doubled Die FS101. I sold it to a Dealer friend several years back.
Just starting out collecting coins. This a great video. Thanks for sharing.
Thank you...we all trying. This was helpful
I just bought an uncirculated 2000 P Massachusetts Quarter, doubled motto " In God We Trust " - On auction at Ebay for $9.95. This coin displays dramatic doubling on the lettering of IN GOD WE TRUST.
Only one die produced this error, that means very few doubled motto coins were struck. Of that original mintage most have been worn, lost, or damaged, by twenty two years in circulation. I think I got a great deal! And thanks for this video, I just got into error coins and this vid helps me out tremendously!!!!!!
WooHoo, thanks again Daniel.
I looked through my recent find of my old collection: NGC 1972 double die 1972 1 cent MS 65 RD and PCGS 1984 MS 66RD 1 cent Double Die.
Still hunting for my big box full of Whitman simple blue coin holder books for my Indians and older stuff, thought I had an 1877.
Thank you for the free education!!!!
I have found that most of what I thought was a double die, ended up being shadows caused by the light on my microscope. Turning the coins solved most of my issues, but not all.
A common mistake is people mistaking machine doubling for hub doubling. I was one of them when I first started collecting
Great information video Daniel. This is a must for everyone to watch and learn the difference of double die and mechanical die. Keep showing the way Daniel and have a great New Year.
Have a great day Sir Daniel!
Probably the description I have heard so far on this. Well done and thank you
I love it! Great presentations on double dies!
Big like number 614! Excellent video and thank you so much for sharing
The video that everyone should learn from! The differences are amazing. Very good info...thanks for this!
Thank you, I have never found one yet. But then again probably most the stuff I have gotten was already searched. I'm not giving up lol
Very informative video. I'll have to look at my Kennedy 64's to see if I spot anything. Thanks for sharing, Daniel! 👍
Excellent video. Thanks for doing this one!
Good information. I hear the term "machine doubling" more than strike doubling. I am assuming they are the same?
Thanks.
Same thing
Strike doubling is more appropriate since it defines when this happens. Machine doubling could mean a machine outside the mint, but the die isn’t a machine. Mechanical doubling is even better than machine doubling.
Good job Daniel, appreciate your knowledge and time.
The problem some of us have is AGE. I cannot see the doubling without a scope. BUT I only look at those that doubling have already been found. So that means I will never find a discovery coin. But it is fun looking.
Thanks for sharing your knowledge 🙌🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻
Good Morning Daniel you have always explain things more clearly than most appreciate this so much,I have 3 mint sets 1977s 2-1985 sets all of the coins have errors you'd think they being mint sets they would be perfect .
This can be very confusing and complicated as I'm learning. I try to get it right when I look at them. Most of what I think I see I refer to as pmds because I still struggle with some of them.
I have a 72 D Lincoln Cent with what I call a "Funny Farm" Font. The lettering on the Obverse looks like it is "ballooned" out. Been trying to find info on it and I believe this video has answered my question. I think now it definitely is a doubled die coin. I appreciate this kind of info because I'm one of those that wasn't well versed on double die coins. And I've been collecting coins for decades!
Sounds more like die deterioration. Look at the nickel in this video. Doubled dies are not ballooned out.
When I'm stumped I put three or four of the same coin next to each other. It's much easier to see it that way!
Very helpful information. Thank you
Demonstrate the strike doubling with a deck of cards. I think everyone will be able to relate to that since they could do it themselves at home.
I think I did a better job in this video. But oh well. Thanks
Excellent video on Flatfield strike doubling versus DDO
This is fabulous information Daniel !!! Speaking from experience and learning from video and books I easily make those mistakes. Now I check recheck LoL and recheck again.if still not sure then I set it aside until I can determine what it is I'm looking at . Very helpful!!!
Excellent teaching video Daniel! 👍
When you show the Kennedy you can see the split ends on some letters. That what i have a lot of. I always look for fat letters then scope them.
Thank you
Thank you sir very helpful information!! I need that info
I feel dumb when I look at ddo and can’t fiqure it out
That is an excellent microscope what kind is it? Your instruction is perfect I couldn't figure out what was doubled and what was machine doubling. Thank you
Great job sir! You da man!
Excellent info.
Thank you I've been struggling with this I got it now!!
Hand punching mint marks seems like ALOT of Extra work And as well as ALOT of room for Error…Astho we see today in Our Hobby! THANK YOU TO THE MINTS FOR DOING MORE WORK THAN WAS NECESSARY!
They didn't hand punch them into each coin, they hand punched them into the working die that struck the coins.
Thank you for another educational video
Thank you for this.
Very informative, thank you.
Helped alot. Thank you @!
I love Double dyes. I'm sure I have a few but some may be mechanical doubling
I know this is off topic but I’ve been trying for over a week to join the coin community and it won’t let me. Never had so much trouble registering on a site before. So then it said “contact board administrator which I did last week but today when I tried, it said it was “disabled”. You are so thorough and explain things in a way I (a super newbie) can understand. I so appreciate all these videos! But I have questions and wanted to post in the community. Thanks for any help! 😊
It doesn’t make sense, you click register, follow the prompts, enter an email and password and done. I join sites all the time and mine is the same as any other, except the ones that allow people to login using their social meadow account. I use the same things as all websites.
It’s something about the robot checker. Crazy.
Here it is. If you’re new to numismatics and are full steam ahead looking for Doubled Dies. You’ll find probably 200 you think are, and then one day you’ll find an actual Doubled Die and immediately know how wrong you’ve been…
I think that if it takes a microscope to see the error then it's not an error.
I agree.
Terrific tutorial
nice job friend
I do not hate doubled dies! I love doubled dies! I have a lot of very nice high prifile doubled dies. I believe what throws a lot of people off with confusion is because of the many different class doublings of course with die deterioration and machine doubling.
Daniel, horizontal shifting or die doubling saturated Lincolns in the late 60's and early 70's especially from San Francisco. Whatever caused the horizontal shift such as a minute vibration or a loose hub, the die REMAINED DOWN, so the date looks like it was scraped and moved over. Double dies REQUIRE the die to go up and down TWO SEPARATE TIMES, and metal is forced into the die two separate times offset, so the effect is VERTICAL DISPLACEMENT which is three dimensional. Die doubling is just two dimensional.
You're NOT correct, the die is already doubled when it is created by the Master Die, the coin is not doubled from the strike or movement from the die at all. A doubled die IS NOT a double struck coin or "two separate times", as you stated, this is the kind of misinformation that confuses collectors.
So what do you think of his reply, christopher?
👍👍 great video . 😁👍
Great video. thanks.
Good video Daniel
I have some old coins and not sure how to keep them from deteriorating? What
What's the best way to protect these? Please
A doubled die will always have a transitional notch or transitional step somewhere on a device
Very informative video
I learned a lot on this one. Question - any suggestions for a coin microscope that won't break the bank?
I don’t recommend a microscope until one knows what they’re looking at. You will see things that will just confuse you and get you hyped up over minor anomalies.
I’m not looking for anomalies. I am old here. I just want to see the coins better. Any suggestions?
Couch Collectibles advertises one worth checking out
Brother you're awesome. I did learn something. I have a 1936 Penny. were half of the date, the bottom part. is smeared like butter. And other parts of the coin. On a scale of 1 to 10.. it's about a 8. ✌️💙🏇🏇🏇 ( How do I get you some pictures??)
Use the coinhelpu community to ask coin questions coinauctionshelp.com/welcome-to-coinhelpu-community/
You should give the name of your company or website Clearly. I tried to find it and couldn't. Close caption and reading the transcript didn't either. Thanks😊
The link is in the pinned comment and description.
Even though I have no idea about anything YET .. I have a weird reason for trying to grasp these things. so the explanation makes sense if using the dough comparison.. is it like..a piece of dough being placed on top of another exact piece of dough but the edges are not lined up exactly, a little askew. so the second piece not only adds to the hieght of it, but measured out all together, the width also? I still don't know why it's more valuable but that's just me being new. The less valuable one is dough that was just pressed with a cookie cutter but some dough remnants were left on the counter but not still part of the dough if you picked it up? 😭 I'm trying
Here's the help community where you can share and ask about your coins or just ask questions. coinauctionshelp.com/welcome-to-coinhelpu-community/
What type of scope are you using and how can I get the best image of my coins? Thanks for the video.
You got to learn doubled dies before using a microscope. I highly recommend not getting until you know the minting process and about how mint errors occur and what they look like.
Hey that 72 Lincoln cent 1st one it almost looked like the fs-104? Is it? Sorry but i couldn't help notice the L in Liberty. I didnt get a really good view of it but if so thats a very nice dd i believe the most rare of the 72s.
HA! You said “Warshington”
New friend here 👍 but what would it be called if it looks doubling? I’m new to this and kinda dumb to it. 🤦♀️
Please use our coinhelpu community to ask coin questions, the link is in the video description.
What you call Strike Doubling, PCGS,NGC and so on. Call it Double Dies,I've seen many many coins that look like that. So someone is wrong.
You’re mistaken. I have my doubled dies graded, I see them I person. You’re looking at images thinking they look the same as strike doubling but that’s not the case.
The 1957 is like a 2022 dime I have
LOTS of Mid to Late 80s have plating issues
Wait..double dies aren't the ones with two different colors??? 😂😅😂😅
Excellent video. This is the hardest thing for me. Thank you so much.
Thanks🇵🇷🇵🇷✌🏻
Or what is it when you can see the image multi struck but flat or next to flat (weak) rotated or of center through the coin?
Use the coinhelpu community to ask coin questions coinauctionshelp.com/welcome-to-coinhelpu-community/
Dude I find em ALL THE TIME…But they’re just Machine Doubling
Hello Daniel i have a 1826 large cent with a very large clipped planchet error. How can i find the value of this type of coin.
Use the coinhelpu community to ask coin questions coinauctionshelp.com/welcome-to-coinhelpu-community/
Any way to contact you for help on three different coins?
Use the coinhelpu community, link is in the video description. I don’t help one on one, my videos and community is how I help.
I have one cent Lincoln : 1. 1944 ( 1 coin ), 2. 1989 D ( 7 coins ), Thanks
Where do I go to have someone tell me I have a double die, because I am so confused. I have gone over and over coins and it seems things change up
I have a doubled die playlist. Watch those vide and that might help you more.
yes where i question my finds and when i try to send or attempt to send pictures of what i have found . i have to go through all kinds of places just to get a simple answer to what i ask or show. where has Simplicity the non complicated way to talk or show something go?
We have a step by step guide and a video on how to post a topic, there's no way to make it easier. coinauctionshelp.com/welcome-to-coinhelpu-community/
Now with weak in collar double or multiple strikes is there a premium?
Use the coinhelpu community to ask coin questions coinauctionshelp.com/welcome-to-coinhelpu-community/
Daniel thank you me & a friend have a bunch of coins that I think need graded. Do you grading company in are around Houston TX
Nope.
@@CoinHELPu it's OK tell me how I can send you pictures lol learning...I am 63 and just started coins.
Here's the help community to ask questions and post images coinauctionshelp.com/welcome-to-coinhelpu-community/
We don't grade your coins using images and tell you if you should send them off.
I don't care that they're damaged as long as the cashier still accepts them.
Anytime someone starts with microscope I loose interest. If you can't see it with the naked eye then it's not worth spending money on.
What is a double V on a 2023 penny there is a guy selling them on eBay for a ridiculous price
Use the coinhelpu community to ask coin questions coinauctionshelp.com/welcome-to-coinhelpu-community/
My question I have 41943steel an 1993 elumamam two ddo steel an 93 is ddo in need to know if it's worth grading
You’re asking impossible to answer question. Your coins need checked out in hand.
I have a few error coins , but there are no dealers here that know anything about them danget !!
Yes