- been struck. This is a
blank planchet error, and is
usually worth a few
dollars for
modern coins. Occasionally,
blank planchets can be rare and valuable,...
-
through blanking machines that
punch out
disks known as
blank planchets (or
simply as
planchets or blanks) on
which coins are struck. This
determines the...
-
struck on
steel planchets left over from 1943.
There are two
explanations given for why this happened. One
explanation is that
steel planchets were left in...
- thousands. In
modern mints, coin dies are
manufactured in
large numbers and
planchets are made into
milled coins by the billions. With the m****
production of...
-
Clapper in How I Won the War (1967), and
Planchet in The
Three Musketeers (1973). He
reprised the role of
Planchet in the 1974 and 1989 sequels, and died...
-
embargo against shipments made it so the mint
could not get any new
copper planchets,
which were
imported from
Great Britain, to
strike coins. The mint made...
-
production was inexact, many
planchets intended for
silver dollars were overweight. This was
remedied by
filing the face of the
planchets; for this reason, the...
- nation's
central bank. By 1980, the Casa de
Moneda de Bogotá
imported planchets, or blanks, into the
country at an
annual cost of over USD 11 million...
-
missing from the coin.
Collectors denote missing parts of the
planchet as "clipped
planchets." A
dirty or oily
blank may
cause the
details of the coin to...
- were used for 5¢ coins. In 1942, both the copper-nickel and 35%
silver planchets were used for 5¢ coins. In 1946, the
Roosevelt design was used for 10¢...