Hinky coins

Author
Discussion

silentbrown

Original Poster:

9,736 posts

129 months

Tuesday 29th October 2024
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Just found I had this in my change.




Pretty sure it's a wrong 'un. The 'gold' colour is way too shiny, Brenda's nose is too pointy and it's missing the inscription on the milled edges.

Good effort otherwise, though.

K87

3,924 posts

112 months

Tuesday 29th October 2024
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Thanks for posting, There are a few other issues too, this is like the old Spot the Difference pictures.

geeks

10,208 posts

152 months

Tuesday 29th October 2024
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silentbrown

Original Poster:

9,736 posts

129 months

Tuesday 29th October 2024
quotequote all
K87 said:
Thanks for posting, There are a few other issues too, this is like the old Spot the Difference pictures.
Yes, the 'heads' side shouldn't have "Two Pounds" on it and the centre spot on the tail should have more (and finer) vertical lines than the middle section.


The Rotrex Kid

32,559 posts

173 months

Tuesday 29th October 2024
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I wonder how much these cost to actually make?

Like is is £1 each or less? Surely you have to be cranking out a load of then to make it worthwhile?

Jonmx

2,742 posts

226 months

Tuesday 29th October 2024
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If you made one that was identical in every respect, from design through to metallurgical composition and it was literally indistinguishable from a Royal Mint produced coin, could it really be called a fake? If the point of origin and issuing body is what determines the value, but there's no traceability (unlike notes with serial numbers) it effectively renders official currency redundant. I can almost understand the push towards digital currency. Obviously the 3 bob note equivalent you have there isn't applicable biglaugh

AlexC1981

5,248 posts

230 months

Tuesday 29th October 2024
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I had a temporary job once for the local council. One of my roles was to put all the coins from parking pay machines though a sorter. I always used to look at the fakes it spat out and I could usually spot when I had a fake pound coin in my wallet. I was surprised by how many there are.

The biggest giveaway was the imprint not being perfectly centred on the coin. If you look at the coin above, you can see the distance between the dots and the edge of the coin is greater at the bottom than the top.

Colonel Cupcake

1,238 posts

58 months

Tuesday 29th October 2024
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No-one ever checks coins, either the shop or the customer. I was stuck with a large number of 2 euro coins. Even though the gold and silver parts are reversed, compared to a 2 pound coin, they all eventually got accepted.

Tony_T

828 posts

94 months

Tuesday 29th October 2024
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Just thought it might be worth posting if anyone has an Atlantic salmon 50p (2023/2024) they are going for £100 plus on ebay at the moment due to having a low mintage figure.

outnumbered

4,540 posts

247 months

Tuesday 29th October 2024
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The previous generation of £1 coins were very heavily faked, the Mint reckoned up to 3% of the circulation was fake back in 2010. If you took a moment to check, they were usually easy to spot, and not just because of the detailing but basic stuff like the edge mottos not matching the faces.

You'd think if you were making the effort to fake coins, that you'd at least get the basic details right.


silentbrown

Original Poster:

9,736 posts

129 months

Tuesday 29th October 2024
quotequote all
K87 said:
That's kosher, but just weird. It's a coin produced in 2022 to mark 25 years of £2 coins, but they put the 1997 date on it!