I have never heard/read of anyone finding any double die pennies while roll/box seaching.
Has anyone here ever found a double die? Not necessarily a 1955, but any others? I'm curious.
Thanks.
NHsorter wrote:I have done plenty of looking for DD's, but no finding. I have always wondered how much it would cost to construct a machine that would automatically scan coins for key dates & errors. A feeder/hopper like the ryedale and a ramp like the ryedale would be the easy part. Then you would need a camera/sensor apparatus that is somehow calibrated to get a good photo of the coin as it is passing by. That is probably the trickiest part. Once you have an image of all the coins in the batch, it would probably not require too much software programming to have the computer analyze the images and compare them against a database of images with known errors.
To make this machine automatically scan,process, and reject a coin into a separate output would probably be too difficult (or too costly), and require too much processing power. But you could run a batch of $10 or $50 and have the computer make note of all the finds and if it is something worthwhile you could then just hand search that batch to pull out the treasure. It could be fantastic for some of these double die / double dated / wide AM / ect. coins that probably have passed through our hands, but we just don't have the time to squint our eyes at each coin when sorting through such bulk.
Cu Penny Hoarder wrote:I have never heard/read of anyone finding any double die pennies while roll/box seaching.
Has anyone here ever found a double die? Not necessarily a 1955, but any others? I'm curious.
Thanks.
RichardPenny43 wrote:What are the value's on DD's? I'm just in it for the Cu, sounds like a waste of time.
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