Variety vs. Error
Not every coin which exhibits
features other than the norm can be classified as an error; a
mistake, the product of a wrong action. In the early history of our
segment of the hobby, ignorance of the minting process abounded and
the general usage of
error
seemed to cover the field. It was difficult to imagine how any
deviation from the norm could be considered anything other than the
result of a wrong action. As we developed a fuller knowledge of the
minting process we began to discover that deliberateness was a
factor, but one that could not always be determined with
accuracy. For example were the
1938 D/S nickels the result of an
accident or were they made deliberately to meet a Denver die
shortage by using left over San Francisco dies and thus avoiding the
waste of precious resources?
Error
however, had become so entrenched in the hobby that even though Alan
Herbert repeatedly made arguments for the use of a more universal
term, minting variety
it never gained more than a nod of acceptance. By the time the
hobby realized the inadequacy of the term, it had taken on a more
technical meaning devoid of its pejorative connotation. The hobby
divided itself into those who collected variations from the norm
which repeated exactly (i.e. RPMs, doubled dies) and those that did
not so repeat (i.e. incomplete planchets, off-centers).
Error
became the term describing the latter category and
variety
or die
variety
the term that described the former.
An error is created while a
variety is born. In order to be classified as a variety, the
deviation has to occur in the die making process. A variety is born
with the die and is thus a part of every coin produced by that die.
On the other hand the production of an error begins and ends
spontaneously during the minting process. Two off-centers may be
similar but for all practical purposes each is unique. A doubled
die, however, can produce a million coins or more, all with the same
doubled image.
A Further Word about Die Varieties
There is a
deficiency which remains in our definitions, in spite of
Alan Herberts excellent work, The Official Price
Guide to Mint Errors, 7th ed., New York: House of
Collectibles, 2007. The Die division of the PDS system has been divided into 2 areas (Die Varieties
and Die Errors). The Die Varieties category is
restricted to a few special areas of interest (Design
Changes, Mintmark Styles, Doubled Dies, Repunched
Mintmarks, and for earlier coinage the Repunched Date
and the Misplaced Date) which are known to be on the die
from its initial use and are for the most part cataloged
by die. Some researchers catalog
Design Changes and Mintmark Styles as
Varieties, but not Die Varieties, because they affect
multiple dies for the year, but the majority of error-variety collectors
place them into the Die Variety category. Everything else (such as die cracks, die
chips, die breaks, cuds, etc.) gets lumped into the Die
Errors category. These are errors which for the most
part occur after the die is put into use, are relatively
common types, and are only occasionally cataloged by
die. Unfortunately we don't always know when a die error
is first formed. So even though some die damage errors
are thought to have been on the die when it was first used
(the WI
extra
leaf
quarters for example), they are still
considered Die Errors, because the Die Varieties
category is restrictive and most die damage occurs after
the die is placed into use.
Another anomaly which has sought entrance into the Die
Variety category is the
wavy
step
or
trail
die.
Current theory points to their creation during the
release of the hub from the die in the new single
squeeze hubbing process (though recent discoveries tend
to indicate that the phenomenon occurred prior to the
advent of the single squeeze process). Some are calling them die
varieties while others are calling them doubled dies. I take my cue for
defining the end of the single squeeze hubbing process from Herbert's
definition for the end of the minting process.
Herbert states on page 40,
The
minting process ends with the final impact of the die
pair upon the coin.
In other words, the second the hammer die starts to
retract from the strike, the coin has been minted.
Anything after that is damage to the coin. Thus,
the second the hub begins to retract from the hubbing,
the die has been made. Anything after that is
damage to the die. Consequently I place the
trail
die
into the Die Error category just as I would any other
type of die damage.
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