1942 Nickel

33E4669D-EF07-4FD4-B6A1-BB3A807B4D49.webp
 

If you are writing about the damage near the 5 o’clock position, it’s usually made by the coin rolling machine.
 

If someone offers you 10 cents, take it before they change their mind.
 

That is a non-silver war nickle. If the 1942 nickle with a P over the dome on the reverse, that is a silver war nickle. It was minted in Philadelphia Pennsylvania and has a face value of .05
That coin you are displaying would probably grate about good, due to the damage. Its worth more spending it than collecting it as a collector coin.

That's about all I can tell you from the photo on that nickle.
 

Okay thank you all for your time. I have another coin if I can get to load.
 

1ABFDB0D-0FCA-4F75-9745-38EA48BBAA73.webp
 

Attachments

  • DDB560D8-07DE-480A-82EC-8520DBCD6783.webp
    DDB560D8-07DE-480A-82EC-8520DBCD6783.webp
    22.9 KB · Views: 72
Always good to ask and learn
 

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Latest Discussions

Back
Top Bottom