Determining the
direction of an RPM is usually an easy task to master. There
are a couple of rules, however, to keep in mind. Since
there is no way to always know which image came first, a
positive statement is needed. RPM directions
are fundamentally opposite that of doubled dies. When
asked why, Alan Herbert stated that he just wanted the two
methods to be different. For doubled
dies, the direction is determined from the lightest image to the
strongest. RPM directions are from the strongest to the
lightest. The eight major compass directions (N, NE, E, SE, S,
SW, W, NW) comprise most of the designations. Then of course
there are the self-explanatory horizontal and inverted
designations. The remaining two designations, Tilted and
Rotated, need a little more explanation. Tilted describes an
RPM where one edge of the punch (typically the North or the
South) is titled into the die so that its opposite edge receives
little or no pressure from the blow of the mallet. The result
is a letter that is half formed. To complete the mintmark, the
punch is then tilted in the opposite direction and receives a
second blow of the mallet. Rotated designates an RPM where the
secondary image is the result of the punch being rotated or
pivoted near the center of the primary image. Thus, the
secondary image shows one direction on the upper serif and the
opposite direction on the lower serif. Both tilted and rotated
RPMs were once described as overlapping. But because the images
of most RPMs overlap, this designation was considered imprecise
and discarded in recent publications.
The normal RPM
and OMM designations are given according to the formula
“mintmark / mintmark, direction”
where the / is read
“over” and
means
“overlapping.” When the first separated RPMs were
discovered, the formula was modified to
“mintmark & mintmark,
direction”
where & is read
“and”
and implies
“separate”
or
“non-overlapping.”
In recent years, we have seen the discovery of the first
supposed separated OMM.
Discussion has
arisen on what to call this animal and how to designate it. The
argument hinges on a couple of facts. First, the category RPM
has both a general and specific definition. In its specific
definition, it refers to the D/D or S/S type doubled mintmarks.
In its general sense, it includes all doubled mintmarks caused
by repunching, whether D/D, D&D, D/S, or D&S. Separated
mintmarks from the same mint fit easily, then, under the RPM
category. Second, the category OMM came into being because of
the special nature of the dual mintmark category. It is defined
as
“one mintmark over a different mintmark,” Some, myself
included, see the emphasis on the mintmarks being different and
conclude that OMM is a satisfactory category for the separated
dual mintmark, especially when accompanied by the modified
designation formula. Others see the emphasis on the word
“over”
meaning
“overlapping”
and conclude that the separated dual
mintmark cannot be an OMM.
Thus they have
devised a new category, called
“DMM”
or
“Dual MintMark”
and have
restricted it to the separated dual mintmark. I object to the
use of DMM for a couple of reasons. First, it seems only
reasonable that if we have a separate category for the separated
dual mintmarks, then we should also have a separate category for
the separated RPM. This would give us four categories for the
doubled mintmark, a number which I think is overkill and
unnecessary, especially when you realize that there are only a
handful of known separated mintmarks from either category.
Second, the DMM has to be restricted to separated dual mintmarks
by definition. The term dual mintmark could just as easily mean
overlapping in the minds of the uninitiated. Thus DMM is
ambiguous, having both a general and specific sense. I
generally try to follow the KISS method (Keep It Simple Son) and
so have rejected the DMM category. I have no problem calling
the separated dual mintmark an OMM. After all, it is two
different mintmarks on the same coin. Therefore, CONECA
continues the tradition of limiting repunched mintmark
categories to the RPM and the OMM, with each category containing
its appropriate separated mintmark type distinguished by the
modified designation formula.