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Double headed novelty and Magician's coins have no numismatic value, but depending on the denomination an quality most are under $10.00.
Unless it's a genuine mistake that occurred in the mint, it's probably worth a few bucks at most. Two-headed quarters are often sold in magic and gag gift shops. See the Related Links for more info about these coins.
They are novelty coins, manufactured for the novelty or illusionist/magician's industry. They're made by altering two normal coins and gluing the pieces back together. If you use a strong magnifier, you can probably find a seam just inside the raised rim on one side of the coin, or around the edge. Technically, they don't have any value except when someone wants one and is willing to pay for it. You can buy them in novelty shops for about $8, or on eBay for $2-$3. Sometimes people will spend their two headed coin without remembering that it isn't a real quarter. One WikiAnswers user claims to have made to a coin collection place in Detroit who said they had a real one that is selling for $100,000, if it is authentic. Sadly, no two-headed quarter has ever been certified as an authentic mint error, though one two-tailed quarter has been certified as an authentic mint error. This means that, in theory, a two-headed quarter with the same date on both sides could be authenticated, but the chances are more in favor of it being the manufactured novelty/magician's coin. Unless it's a genuine mistake that occurred in the mint, it's probably worth a few bucks at most. Two-headed quarters are often sold in magic and gag gift shops. See the Related Links for more info about these coins.
If you mean "How do you make the worth of a quarter with 3 coins", the answer is: two dimes and one nickel.
If you mean an expession such as "quarter of six," it means a quarter of an hour before six o'clock, or in other words, 5:45. A quarter of an hour is 15 minutes (1/4 of 60, the number of minutes in an hour). Two quarter-hours make half an hour.
There are no 3 headed quarters minted by the U.S. Mint.
A two headed quarter is not something that was done at the mint, it is a novelty item, generally with high enough magnification you can see the seam that the two coins were joined together. They aren't rare and really aren't worth any more than a quarter.
Double headed novelty and Magician's coins have no numismatic value, but depending on the denomination an quality most are under $10.00
The word Bicephalic means two-headed in Greek language.
Double headed novelty and Magician's coins have no numismatic value, but depending on the denomination an quality most are under $10.00.
You have a novelty item called a magician's coin. It's not real.
a double headed snake with no tail, what does it mean?
Dolicephaly mean Two-headed infant
That's a novelty two-headed coin. They're sold in joke and magic shops.
It's a trick coin, sold in magic or novelty shops. It did NOT come that way from the U.S. Mint.
Not a US Mint product. Two quarters have been glued together and it has no collectible value.
Nothing it is considered a magicians coin. They shave off one half of two quarters and then melt them together. On half will be thinner than the other.