>> Given my very limited knowledge of the subject, that is what I take it to be also. These include the 1971 “No S” Jefferson nickel, the 1968, 1970, 1975 and 1983 “No S” Roosevelt dimes, and the 1976 “No S” Type 2 Eisenhower dollar. The proof 90% silver Roosevelt dimes made since 1992 are also mostly worth consistent values year to year, with a few exceptions. Some coins show a relatively weak strike while most show a strong strike. https://www.coincommunity.com/forum/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=141887 It should be noted that the designation “No S” only applies to proof coins that should have had an “S” on them to start with. Except for errors and varieties, there is no circulated business-strike Roosevelt dime struck from 1946 through 1964 that is worth big bucks. 1968 No S Dime, PR68 First No S Proof Issue 1968 10C No S PR68 PCGS. Evidently they mean "New Reverse of 1968" which was used only on some 1968 S dimes in 1968. However, beginning in 1968, mintmarks were moved to the obverse, usually near the date. Roosevelt dime values are straightforward. But the fact, no mintage estimates have been published. I'm not a modern dime collector but in looking through the dime registry sets I don't see any slot for a business strike of those dates with a proof reverse. Coins to watch for are the 1968 No S Proof (Roosevelt Dime), 1970 No S Proof (Roosevelt Dime), 1971 No S Proof (Jefferson Nickel), 1975 No S Proof (Roosevelt Dime), 1983 No S Proof (Roosevelt Dime), and 1990 No S Proof (Lincoln Cent). << THe term "Reverse of 1968" is a little confusing to me since there were two reverses that year. Standard practice was to place the mintmark on the reverse of branch mint coins until 1964, with only a few exceptions. ROOSEVELT DIME 1968 NO S Price : $100,000 I'm not sure if it is a Proof or regular 1968-s roosevelt no s dime. These No S Proofs were issued only in 5-coin Proof Sets sold directly by the government. Re: 1968 no s proof dime #2 Unread post by Daniel » Fri Dec 01, 2017 10:57 am It's not a proof coin but a business strike and when this date has no … There is a slot for both of those dates as varieties but the slot just says 69 (and 70) with a 68 reverse no mention of it being a proof reverse. Proof-1 through Proof-70). PCGS has certified 18 of these dimes and NGC 6, per a study conducted by stack’s Bowers Galleries researcher Andrew W. Pollock III, using those services’ data bases. The 1968-S proofs are lacking in obverse detail, due to the eroded condition of the obverse master hub. It has been determined that the “weak strike” was produced first and both it and the “strong strike” were generated by the same die pair. A circulation strike 1975 Roosevelt dime. The reverse of such coins typically is quite sharp, though overly vigorous polishing of the dies on 1968-S proofs of all denominations resulted in the … Proof coins are graded in a similar manner to business strike coins (i.e. To properly identify a 1975 No S Roosevelt dime, one must first be able to distinguish between a Proof coin that is made for collectors and a business strike that is made for circulation. In 1982 a business-strike Roosevelt dime appeared without the P-mintmark. The 1975 No-S Roosevelt dime is chronologically flanked by several other No-S Proof coins that were created during the same era, including three in the Roosevelt dime series minted in 1968… All other 1968 dimes were the reverse of 1967.
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