If you are referring to the 1955 Lincoln cent doubled-die obverse coin, it does not have a Type I or Type II identifier. But if you are asking about the so-called "Poor Man's doubled-die", on which the second numeral 5 has a shadow, it's not a true hubb-double and carries very little premium.
In some cases, a double die adds to the value of a coin but in other cases it does not. Whether or not the value increases by the presence of a double die is determined simply by the market demand for them. For this Kennedy half I find the value in uncirculated condition to be about $18.
It means, Double Die Reverse
If the coin is a rotated die error. Value is about $15-$20.
A third of 300 is 100 and 100 doubled is 200.
No such coin is possible to exist. On modern mint equipment the obverse and reverse dies are "keyed" it is impossible to strike a coin using 2 reverse dies because the reverse die will not fit in both sides of the machinery. All 2 tailed quarters are privately made novelties worth only curiosity value.
The easy way to see one is, type in 1955 Double Die on your browser and click images.
it is worth up to $1,500 in circulated grades
It is a common date, worth from 3 to 25 cents depending on condition.
A circulated example of a genuine 1955 Double-Die Lincoln coin runs from $975.00 to $2,500.00
Genuine 1955 double-die error coins in circulated condition have retail values of $900.00 to $2,250.00 depending on the grade of the coin. Mint State examples have values of $2,500.00 to more than $10,000.00 depending on color and grade.
The key to valuation is an accurate assessment of the condition of the coin. Some of the "best" double die cents from 1955 can currently go for as much as $1200 to $1300 depending on the all-important condition.
There is no variation of the 1957 Wheat penny that is worth $8,000.00. A 1955 Double die obverse in uncirculated condition is worth $12,000.00.
The 1955 Doubled Die cent is a die variety that occurred during production of the Lincoln cent at the Philadelphia Mint in 1955.
David Worth Clark died on 1955-06-19.
> $2,000 or $0.01
its worth about 3 dollars uncirculated and 1.29 circulated i have two of them and there are un circulated bu conditon
Are you referring to a double-die cent? There are no reports of double-die nickels. The only error that year is an overpunched mint mark, resulting in a D-over-S error.