The answer depends on its initial velocity and the height from which its fall to the ground is measured.
A bit of sound, depending how much PCM you take.
take it to coinstar and get coin count and multiply each respective coin to its mint weight and voila
All error coins need to be seen. Take it to a coin dealer for an assessment.
It depends on the error, the best to do is take it to a coin dealer so it can be seen.
A coin such as this needs to be seen to determine if it a true mint error or not. I suggest you take the coin to a coin shop and have it appraised.
Each coin would have to be seen for a value. Take them to a local coin dealer for an assessment.
In order to give an accurate estimate, the coin should be seen. I suggest you take it to a coin dealer and have it appraised.
In order to give an accurate estimate, the coin should be seen. I suggest you take it to a coin dealer and have it appraised.
The U.S. Mint has never made a $10 JFK coin of any kind. Take it to coin dealer to find out what it is.
All error coins need to be seen, most 'errors' are very common and do not add any value to the coin. Take it to a coin dealer.
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You don't. You don't EVER clean a gold coin and you don't clean a silver coin. Cleaning ruins the value of coins! If it has any collector value at all it will be demolished by a cleaning. Cleaning can take a $100 coin into a $10 coin. It will never, ever improve the value of the coin unless you literally dug it out of the ground. Do not clean coins.