1982 1C large date penny - silver colored - mint error?

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Colddna
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1982 1C large date penny - silver colored - mint error?

#1 Unread post by Colddna »

I am trying to fully identify this penny but I'm kinda confused and lost can anyone point me into the right direction, I can not find any more information on this one, I can't tell if it's on a 10c or what
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Re: 1982 1C large date penny questions

#2 Unread post by JTCC »

Weight of the coin please.
first impression is that this coin is plated after it left the mint, needed weight to be sure.
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Re: 1982 1C large date penny questions

#3 Unread post by Paul »

JTCC wrote: Wed Dec 07, 2022 5:09 pm Weight of the coin please.
first impression is that this coin is plated after it left the mint, needed weight to be sure.
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Re: 1982 1C large date penny questions

#4 Unread post by Iceresistance »

Brass plated, then heated to have a silver color. I saw that demonstration when I was in a science class in High School.
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Re: 1982 1C large date penny questions

#5 Unread post by Colddna »

2.59ish grams

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Re: 1982 1C large date penny - silver colored - mint error?

#6 Unread post by Earle42 »

Within tolerances for a penny. It's been plated or the color turned to silver in the process Ice mentioned above.

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Common grading company shortcomings & resulting co$tly mi$take$ to collectors (using Kennedy No FG halves):
https://tinyurl.com/y7rksxu8

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Re: 1982 1C large date penny - silver colored - mint error?

#7 Unread post by Daniel »

It’s plated.

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Re: 1982 1C large date penny - silver colored - mint error?

#8 Unread post by Colddna »

Would it be worth submitting it to be graded because I know no one in my family plated it and used a method of changing the color also it has been in a safe deposit box for who knows how long

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Re: 1982 1C large date penny - silver colored - mint error?

#9 Unread post by Earle42 »

A plated coin is considered a damaged coin. It is worth nothing to a collector. It is very easy to plate any metal with nickel to make it look like this. Look up nickel plating online.

You also may benefit from the following since you mentioned getting it graded - that would have been a very costly error on your part:

If you enjoy losing money, skip reading the following essay :D

The Insider's Guide to Using Grading Companies
-or-
Thinking of Slabbing? Make sure you understand the Facts...or You Could Lose Money.

Popular mistaken mindset:
1. The grading companies are not a method/way that the majority of people, even those with a great deal of experience who know what they are doing, are going to be able to use in order to make huge personal profits. Many people start using grading companies thinking they will find a way to finance their hobby, but they learn a hard lesson quickly.

In general, the coin you have found in circulation is NOT going to make huge profits if slabbed. Way too many people pad the pockets of the companies and get nothing in return b/c they THINK (youtube videos!) they have something rare.

Professional predicting not possible:
2. Watch some of Daniel's videos where he gets slabbed coins back from the grading companies. Note even people who live, eat, breath, and deal coins for a living (like Daniel) can accurately predict what grade the companies will give. And...the "fault" (not really a fault) is in a widespread mistaken perception people get from being exposed to all the slabs being sold nowadays:

a. Coin grading companies are a business out to make a profit - this is why they exist. They use a system where allegedly three, but in reality its normally two, graders look at each coin and give an opinion. The company videos showing the process make you believe this is a relaxed and paced process of studying each coin. In fact one PCGS video shows a number of guys sitting around a table discussing what they think a specific coin should be graded as (on youtube somewhere - sorry no link). Uh uh.

b. If you take a PCGS graded coin slabbed as MS64, break it out, and resubmit it to PCGS, you are never guaranteed the same grade again. The slabbed coin might come back MS62 (extreme and a bad day for graders), 63, 64, 65, 66 (extreme and a great day for you!). This is b/c the process is all subjective: No scientific/verifiable standards or methods are used. This subjectivity makes for greater company profits since people resubmit the same coin trying to get a higher (better price when selling) grade. In the 90s the companies, at great expense, created better (their own words) scientific methods not relying upon human opinion. No doubt the large profit from the re-slabbing game fell. The companies abandoned the science and went back to their less accurate systems.

c. It needs be mentioned that the fewer the "money grade" slabs a company assigns, the more prices of said slabs climbs. Thus more business is generated b/c more people pay to slab coins hoping to get that "money grade" slab. And the companies do keep records (accessible online) of how many of the higher graded slabs exist for each coin. While the idea of keeping money grade slabs minimized is speculative, there has been some convincing evidence of this being reality.

But..this is all hearsay without proof. So...
Grading the Coin Graders

Here is another good read from someone there at the start of the grading companies:
Hobby negative impacts from slabbing companies

Error on errors:
3. People also seem to think grading companies will examine a coin to see if they can find an error and then slab it as such. But again, they ONLY GRADE coins. The companies will NOT try to find and ID an error for you. You must FIRST ID the error yourself, CHECK to see if the company you want to use recognizes that specific error, PAY them to verify the error on the label, and then you may or may not actually get what you pay for! The companies have a bad reputation for attributing errors incorrectly.

Link to and read (download if you want it) the pdf link in my signature as an eye opening example. Sadly, the verifiable data presented from the PCGS website shows trusting people have spent thousands of dollars on many slabbed coins that are not what the companies claims/slabbed the coins to be.

Cost concerns:
4. B/c people do not understand the businesses, so very many people end up with spending far more money to slab a coin than the coin is worth. The companies profit greatly with membership fees, submission fees, insurance fees, priority shipping fees and extra (chosen) fees. When you do the math for all of these fees you are approaching $150-200.00 for a slabbed coin the very first time you submit. ANACs does not have all these fees though.


You don't have to throw in the towel over these companies...but education about the reality of them will put you on the right pathway to dealing with them in a legit way without losing money in the process.
Common grading company shortcomings & resulting co$tly mi$take$ to collectors (using Kennedy No FG halves):
https://tinyurl.com/y7rksxu8

How much squash would a sasquatch squash if a sasquatch would squash squash?

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Re: 1982 1C large date penny - silver colored - mint error?

#10 Unread post by Daniel »

Colddna wrote: Thu Dec 08, 2022 1:12 am Would it be worth submitting it to be graded because I know no one in my family plated it and used a method of changing the color also it has been in a safe deposit box for who knows how long
It was plated before you family owned it, that is why it was kept, because someone thought it was special. You coin is plated, it is damaged and not worth submitting. It will not straight grade for you.

I did a video on my plated coin collection.


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