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By Susan Headley, About.com Guide to Coins since 2006

Find Error Coins in Pocket Change in 8 Simple Steps

Tuesday September 8, 2009

To me, one of the most amazing things about coin collecting as a hobby is that you don't need a lot of special tools or equipment to get started. Sure, these things help, but anybody can begin collecting coins right out of their pocket change!Error coin found in pocket change - a struck-through-grease nickel. 140 million Americans are collecting State Quarters, and trying to put together a complete set of one of each State Quarter type out of pocket change is tougher than you might think!

For people who want to collect older coins right from circulation, the Jefferson Nickels simply can't be beat! I often find nickels from the 1940's and '50's when I search through rolls of nickels from the bank. I wrote an article awhile back about how to begin a collection of these great nickels right out of circulation, called How to Start a Coin Collection on $4. But easily the most valuable coins circulating through our pocket change these days are the error coins and die varieties. Some of these coins are worth thousands of dollars, as explained in The Top 10 Most Valuable Coins Found in Pocket Change.

Of course, knowing these error coins are out there, and being able to actually recognize one when you see it are two different things. Although most of the more valuable error coins and die varieties are pretty easy to see under decent magnification, (7x to 10x power,) they are rare, so the key to finding them is being able to quickly sort through lots of coins. I've written a step-by-step set of instructions that will teach you how to quickly check your coins. Whether you just want to make sure the coins that pass through your pockets aren't prized doubled dies, or you're serious about cherrypicking and buy rolls of coins every chance you get, if you learn these steps to examining your coins and let them become a habitual system of actions, you'll find that you can process a great volume of coins in a short time. Learn How to Find Error Coins in Pocket Change in 8 Simple Steps.

Photo of a typical error coin found in pocket change. This struck-through-grease nickel was found by Vira Horwith. Photography by Ken Potter, NLG.

Comments

September 14, 2009 at 4:15 pm
(1) Clair says:

Well, I didn’t find it in my pocket change, but I did get a great error coin from the mint this year. If you look at the thread in the forum titled “2009 S 25C Silver Proof Error” at http://forums.about.com/n/pfx/forum.aspx?tsn=1&nav=messages&webtag=ab-coins&tid=1687 you will find a discussion and pictures of a silver quarter minted from an error die. The die appears to have stuck something prior to have being used to mint the proof quarters. The neat thing about this coin is that because it is a die error, there should be some number of identical coins out there. The error is on the 2009 Silver Proof Quarter for the Northern Mariana Islands. The error is difficult to spot at a glance, so if you have the 2009 Silver Proof Quarters, take a close look to see if you have this error coin.

September 14, 2009 at 6:07 pm
(2) coiny says:

Hi clair! Thanks for the up date. I followed that thread. Never gave it a tought to check my own. Thinking yours might have been a one shot deal. Of a lucky find. Thanks again for the reminder, i have to write that down as a to do, asap.
Thanks for shareing.

coiny

November 11, 2009 at 12:16 am
(3) Kestner says:

one of the hardest things is differentiating between machine doubling and an actual double die. Took me a while to figure that one out myself.

Great Post!

http://sites.google.com/site/kestner86

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