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The same as all other double-headed coins - nothing. It's a trick coin sold at novelty shops for a couple of bucks. It's not real and has no value to collectors.
No, it's not possible that a double-headed quarter with two such diverse dates could be a legitimate Mint error. Dies are destroyed, if not worn out through usage, by the end of the year in which they are used. The coin in question is almost certainly a novelty or magician's coin.
y is directly proportional to a, for any value of b (other than 0). If you double a, you double y; if you quadruple a, you quadruple y. Similarly, if you halve/quarter a, then you halve/quarter y.
It's a novelty coin and can be purchased at many novelty shops for a couple dollars. If you try to spend it you can get a quarter for it most places, but technically it's a defaced coin and should not be used as money.
Not if it is a modern coin. Modern coin minting equipment has the obverse (heads) and the reverse (Tails) dies "keyed" meaning that you can't insert an obverse die where the reverse die goes and vice versa. Because of it, it is impossible to have what most people think of a double headed coin. It is however possible to have what is known as a "Brockage" error where a coin gets stuck to the die and then the coin acts as a die for the next coin. This would mean that a coin could have 2 heads, but one side would be a reverse image of the other side.
There are no 3 headed quarters minted by the U.S. Mint.
It's a trick coin, sold in magic or novelty shops. It did NOT come that way from the U.S. Mint.
5 cents PLEASE take a few seconds to run a search and you will find hundreds of other similar questions with explanations of how these novelty items are made.
It's a fake. Please use the Search feature to find dozens of postings on this topic.
The same as all other double-headed coins - nothing. It's a trick coin sold at novelty shops for a couple of bucks. It's not real and has no value to collectors.
That's a novelty two-headed coin. They're sold in joke and magic shops.
No, it's not possible that a double-headed quarter with two such diverse dates could be a legitimate Mint error. Dies are destroyed, if not worn out through usage, by the end of the year in which they are used. The coin in question is almost certainly a novelty or magician's coin.
You have an altered coin worth maybe a dollar as a novelty item. I have one of these coins. It is not an altered coin. It is thicker and larger thana US quarter. Since both names on this coin are names of products by the Syngenta company, I would suspect this is some kind of advertising coin for their products.
dated each other NO dated other girls yes
Only the ones made as magician's coins, the same as the ones in the U.S. and other countries.
This Was not made by the mint. Its a novelty coin or something someone has made. The coin has little or no value.
y is directly proportional to a, for any value of b (other than 0). If you double a, you double y; if you quadruple a, you quadruple y. Similarly, if you halve/quarter a, then you halve/quarter y.