"Minting" is the process by which coins are manufactured. It's more complex than you might think, and involves a lot of machinery and special terminology.
Modern mints usually begin with large coils of sheet metal that look like enormous rolls of aluminum foil. These are often supplied by outside manufacturers who make many other kinds of metals, rather than being created by the mint itself. The metal in the rolls is already made to the correct thickness for the coins that will be made from it - there will be rolls for dimes, other rolls for quarters, and so on because each coin is a different thickness.
The metal rolls are fed into huge machines that punch out circles, a lot like cookie cutters. The resulting circles are the blanks from which the final coins will be made. The technical term for the blanks is "planchets". The leftover metal looks like a giant piece of lace or Swiss cheese, and is sent back for recycling. The planchets themselves are fed into what are called "upsetting machines". An upsetting machine doesn't get the blanks angry; what it does is to spin the blanks between rollers that raise, or "upset" a small amount of metal around the edges. That forms the rim that you see on a coin.
The most important step comes next. The blanks are fed into hoppers that release them one at a time into a tube, called the feed tube, that sends each one into the coin press. The blank falls into a holder called a collar. The collar may have smooth edges inside or may have small grooves. A grooved collar will form the ridges, called "reeding" that some coins such as dimes have on their edges. The press has two large metal holders, each one of which holds a die made of extremely hard metal that bears a reverse image of the coin's design. As soon as the planchet lands in the collar, the press brings the 2 dies together and they squeeze the design into the metal of the planchet. The squeezing process makes the metal spread just a tiny bit so the coin's rim is pressed into the collar; if the collar is reeded the ridges are formed as well. The dies then pull apart and the finished coin is ejected into a hopper.
If a coin is supposed to have a lettered edge, like the new $1 pieces, it goes through one last process: the otherwise completed coin goes through another machine sort of like an upsetting machine. The difference is that the coin is now pressed edgewise against a roller that has a reversed version of the edge lettering on it.
All this happens at incredibly high speed - for example, cents are made so quickly that you can't even follow the press as it opens and closes. As you might guess, there's a lot of room for error and mints try very hard to make sure that mistakes don't get out, but it does happen. That's how you find coins without images, with two images, with images that are only partially struck, and so on.
Because you've now seen the various terms that refer to parts of the minting process, be careful of the many mistaken explanations some people give when they discuss coins. You'll often hear about coins being "stamped" or even "printed", or the blanks being called "slugs", but those words are never used by coin people!
The Krugerrand coin was minted in 1967 making the earliest coins about 44 years old.
Since 1970 (to 2011) 47, 054,145 1oz coins were minted. The largest amount minted in one year was in 1978 when 6, 012, 293 were minted.
There is no predetermined limit for coins minted for general circulation. The number of coins made for the year depends on the economy.
Before 1965 in most cases. While error coins can be found on any coin from the earliest coins to the present, all other coins that are valuable were minted before 1965. Any dime, quarter, or half-dollar minted before 1965 was minted in 90% silver making it worth more than face based on that only, no matter how common the year was.
The number of minted Morgan silver dollars at the Carson City Mint varied each year. Notably, in 1878, 2,300,000 coins were minted, while in 1880, the figure dropped to 1,250,000. The peak year was 1884, with 1,100,000 minted, but in 1885, only 1,000 coins were produced, making it one of the rarest. Overall, the minting figures fluctuated significantly, reflecting the changing demand and production capabilities of the time.
No US 1 Dollars coins were minted in 1907.
The coins that were minted in France in 1790 were called the livre tournois.
Current circulating U.S. coins are minted in Philadelphia and Denver, with collector proof coins minted in San Francisco.
There were 1,710,946 1892 British Halfcrown coins minted.
Australian coins minted at the Melbourne Mint do not have a mintmark.
Of the few Australian general circulation coins that were minted in either 1989 or 1990, there were fewer general circulation 1990 coins minted, making them slightly rarer. 1 cent coins - 1989 - 168 million minted 1990 - 52.99 million minted 2 cent coins - 1989 - 124.5 million minted 1990 - none minted for general circulation 5 cent coins - 1989 - 43 million minted 1990 - 31.81 million minted 10 cent coins - 1989 - 43 million minted 1990 - 23.69 million minted 20 cent coins - 1989 - none minted for general circulation 1990 - none minted for general circulation 50 cent coins - 1989 - none minted for general circulation 1990 - none minted for general circulation 1 Dollar coins - 1989 - none minted for general circulation 1990 - none minted for general circulation 2 Dollar coins - 1989 - 30 million minted 1990 - 8.7 million minted
No US dollar coins were minted in 1983.
They were coins minted by the Philidelphia mint
There were 4,337,200 Australian 1997 50 cent coins minted.
Most people who collect British coins would collect coins minted before 1968.
Coins dated 1970 were minted at three mints. Coins bearing no mintmark were minted in Philadelphia. Those with an "S" Mintmark were made in San Fransisco. Those with a "D" mintmark were made in Denver.
For coins minted in British India (pre-1947), the Bombay minted used a dot. For coins minted in independent India, (post-1947), the Bombay mint uses a small diamond (although proof coins from 1969 to 1995 used a "B").