• When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.

Business Washington Quarter Reverse Design Varieties (1965 to present)
0

13 posts in this topic

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RDV-003 = Type C = IIIo --> serif on N of UNUM
RDV-004 = Type D = IIIa1 --> inside edge of wing where it joins body is very weak
Type D (not RDV-004/IIIa1) --> huge gap between right side of N of UNUM and eagle's head
RDV-005 = Type E = IIIa2 --> incuse (sunken) outline of eagle's left wing
RDV-006 = Type F = IIIb --> master hub doubling inside top of Q in QUARTER
RDV-007 = Type M (or G) = IIIm --> rounded (not pointed) leaf to left of arrowpoints
RDV-008 = Type B (or H) = IIb --> leaf to left of arrowpoints extends above arrowpoints
Reverse of 1972 = IIIb/m (?) --> rotated doubling that shows up best in bottom lettering?
RDV-009 = IIIc
RDV-011 = IV = IVa --> N and I in UNITED merged on top serifs?
RDV-012 = IVb --> N and I in UNITED are merged at bottom and at top?
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1965
RDV-003 (Scarce, ~5%)
RDV-004
RDV-005

1966
RDV-003 (Unconfirmed [?], scarce)
RDV-004
RDV-005

1967
RDV-003 (Rare, ~1%)
RDV-004
RDV-005
RDV-006 (Rare, <0.50%)

1968-(P)
RDV-004
RDV-005
RDV-006 (~50% [P+D])

1968-D
RDV-004
RDV-005
RDV-006 (~50% [P+D])

1969-D
RDV-004 (Very Scarce, 29.1% [RDV-004+RDV-005])
RDV-005 (29.1% [RDV-004+RDV-005])
RDV-006 (Rare [?], 58.1%)
RDV-007 (Scarce, 12%)
RDV-008 (Rare, 0.80%, ~1,000,000?)

1970
RDV-006 (93.6%)
RDV-007 (Rare, 6.3%)

1970-D (~2,300 working dies, average ~185,000 coins per working die)
RDV-006 (84.3%)
RDV-007 (11.2%)
RDV-008 (Rare, 0.10%, ~500,000)

1971 (average 170,000 coins per working die)

1971-D
RDV-006
RDV-008 (Rare, 0.03%, ~80,000, one working die?)

1972-D
RDV-006
RDV-008 (Rare, 0.012%, ~40,000, one working die?)

1973
Reverse of 1972 (Scarce)
RDV-009

1974
Reverse of 1972 (Rare?)
RDV-009

1974-D
Reverse of 1972
RDV-009

Quarters made in 1975 are dated either 1974 or 1976

1977
Type D (Scarce, one working die)
RDV-011

1977-D
Type D (Scarce)
RDV-011

1978
Type D (Tough)
RDV-011

1978-D
Type D (Scarce)
RDV-011

1979
Type D (Tough, 5%)
RDV-011

1979-D
Type D (2%)
RDV-011

1980-P
Type D
RDV-011
RDV-012

1980-D
Type D
RDV-011
RDV-012

1981-P
Type D
RDV-012

1981-D
Type D
RDV-012

1982-D
Type D
RDV-012

1983-P
Type D (~15%)
RDV-012

1983-D
Type D (~20%)
RDV-012

1984-P
Type D
RDV-012

1984-D
Type D
RDV-012

Sources:
http://www.heartlandcoinclub.com/Documents/Washington%20Quarters%20Reverse%20Design%20Varieties%20(RDV)%20From%20A%20to%20H,%20and%20Beyond%20Rev.%203-2019.pdf
http://www.heartlandcoinclub.com/Documents/Washington%20Quarters%20Reverse%20Design%20Varieties%20-%20Quick%20Reference%20Guide%20(Rev%2009-02-2019).pdf
http://conecaonline.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/QuarterRDVHandout.pdf
https://nnp.wustl.edu/library/book/527681?fbclid=IwAR3pKZe55pVYKT5zRG1HdueHbZ-RG3xaxXqIjEoAvfCzFHnPG8Qy2G3cTYM (big thanks to Pete Apple!)
https://forums.collectors.com/discussion/419710/clad-quarter-varieties/p1
http://www.varietyvista.com/09b%20WQ%20Vol%202/Reverse%20Design%20Varieties.htm
https://www.ngccoin.com/variety-plus/united-states/quarters/washington-quarters-1932-1998/?page=2
https://forums.collectors.com/discussion/659907/kiss-1968-s-1969-d-type-b-and-3-other-reverse-varieties
https://forums.collectors.com/discussion/627990/1970-d-quarter-varieties-reverses-includes-type-b-h-and-type-m-g
Thanks to Sam Petry!
Thanks to Jose Gallego!

(C) Shane Daniel

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Way cool!

How do you differentiate between the the 1980 RDV-11's and 12's?  

I have noticed a lower relief but I've seen no pick up points. Are there any other pick up points than you list above?   Is either tough?

 

 

I might add that in almost every single case that only one of the reverses shows up in mint sets and since almost all clads originated in mint sets this means the other reverses will be very scarce in high grade no matter the mintage.   The only exception that I know of is the 1981-P appears as the RDV-11 and type "d" in mint sets.  About 1 in 175 mint sets has the type "d".  

Edited by cladking
Link to comment
Share on other sites

17 hours ago, cladking said:

Way cool!

How do you differentiate between the the 1980 RDV-11's and 12's?  

I have noticed a lower relief but I've seen no pick up points. Are there any other pick up points than you list above?   Is either tough?

 

 

I might add that in almost every single case that only one of the reverses shows up in mint sets and since almost all clads originated in mint sets this means the other reverses will be very scarce in high grade no matter the mintage.   The only exception that I know of is the 1981-P appears as the RDV-11 and type "d" in mint sets.  About 1 in 175 mint sets has the type "d".  

Yay, thank you! <3 I was hoping you'd get to see this. For some reason PCGS did not approve this post for their forum, so I didn't think you'd see it. As for the 1980, I have not personally looked at any yet to identify the RDV and am just trusting preliminary info from Gallego. He says it may be incorrect. I will be looking for all of these starting on my next quarter roll hunt. I appreciate the additional information!!

Edited by shaney777
typo, correction
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Back in the day if you didn't find these reverses within a few years of issue it was extremely difficult to locate nice examples.  Herb Hicks had a few articles published in the coin papers but I missed the most important one since it was before I was a regular subscriber.  

 

I wager there will be a few more found over the years.   I believe mint personnel were not fastidious about changing the reverse dies at the beginning of the year.  If it was in good shape they either chose not to change it or overlooked changing it and there are several pretty big reverse die changes over the years.  I found a lot of the ones I had set aside and didn't find anything important but I still have a bunch of undisturbed safety deposit boxes I'm emptying for sale.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 4/6/2021 at 4:57 AM, shaney777 said:

For some reason PCGS did not approve this post for their forum

The explanation ATS seems to be that it is a software bug (not a 17-year cicada) not related to content. Maybe if you try again it will post.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

17 hours ago, cladking said:

Back in the day if you didn't find these reverses within a few years of issue it was extremely difficult to locate nice examples.  Herb Hicks had a few articles published in the coin papers but I missed the most important one since it was before I was a regular subscriber.  

 

I wager there will be a few more found over the years.   I believe mint personnel were not fastidious about changing the reverse dies at the beginning of the year.  If it was in good shape they either chose not to change it or overlooked changing it and there are several pretty big reverse die changes over the years.  I found a lot of the ones I had set aside and didn't find anything important but I still have a bunch of undisturbed safety deposit boxes I'm emptying for sale.

I really wish I knew how to find his other articles. When you say nice examples, do you mean high grade? I can't imagine that they'd get too messed up in circulation after just a few years. Cool, thank you for the information. Can I get you to look at these two images from PCGS CoinFacts and tell me if they look like your type D and RDV-012?

Screenshot_20210408-032727.png

Link to comment
Share on other sites

18 hours ago, cladking said:

Back in the day if you didn't find these reverses within a few years of issue it was extremely difficult to locate nice examples.  Herb Hicks had a few articles published in the coin papers but I missed the most important one since it was before I was a regular subscriber.  

 

I wager there will be a few more found over the years.   I believe mint personnel were not fastidious about changing the reverse dies at the beginning of the year.  If it was in good shape they either chose not to change it or overlooked changing it and there are several pretty big reverse die changes over the years.  I found a lot of the ones I had set aside and didn't find anything important but I still have a bunch of undisturbed safety deposit boxes I'm emptying for sale.

And here is the other picture

Screenshot_20210408-032754.png

Link to comment
Share on other sites

17 hours ago, RWB said:

The explanation ATS seems to be that it is a software bug (not a 17-year cicada) not related to content. Maybe if you try again it will post.

Haha xD cool, thank you!! I'll try it again then.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

23 hours ago, cladking said:

I believe mint personnel were not fastidious about changing the reverse dies at the beginning of the year.  If it was in good shape they either chose not to change it or overlooked changing it and there are several pretty big reverse die changes over the years.  I found a lot of the ones I had set aside and didn't find anything important but I still have a bunch of undisturbed safety deposit boxes I'm emptying for sale.

Usable undated dies normally remain in use across calendar year changes. This approach has been in place, with small differences, for 150+ years.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 4/8/2021 at 8:34 AM, RWB said:

Usable undated dies normally remain in use across calendar year changes. This approach has been in place, with small differences, for 150+ years.

I don't doubt it but in modern times there aren't many  cases where the reverse die wasn't swapped out at the beginning of the year.  I'd guess they changed this policy at some point.  There are numerous mismatched dies in clad quarters and some could have been caused by this process in 1965 but after this it is at the very least uncommon.  There would be dozens of mules and hundreds of thousand, millions of coins.  There are just repeated changes to reverses.  While most of these changes are very subtle from year to year there are also several quite dramatic changes.  Back in the day I could tell the date and mint mark from the reverse with a better than 60% accuracy.  Very very few coins stood out as real anomalies.  

Edited by cladking
Link to comment
Share on other sites

An aside comment. This die record page for cents from the Denver Mint, 1924, shows that at least as early as that year, undated dies (reverse) from a previous year were used for current-year coinage. In this instance, three reverse dies held over from 1921 were used in early January.

Pages from Denver cent dies 1922-1925.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
0