I got a couple of 2006 pennies in my change yesterday, and they look and feel …wrong.
They’re bright and shiny, but they feel too light and they don’t sound right when I drop them. They look and feel like copper-coated aluminum.
I know there’s ben talk of doing somethuing about pennies, even abolishing them, because they cost more to produce than they’re worth, but I never heard that they were actually going to do it. Checking the U.S. Mint website shows nothing, and Googling the topic doesn’t pick up anything either.
I could be wrong, bur I swear these pennies aren’t right.
The Mint may have changed their composition to save money. This happened to UK pennies a few years ago. They used to be bronze, now they’re bronze-plated steel. Outwardly they’re identical to the old pennies, but you can tell the difference if you have a magnet.
Compare them with some ‘ordinary’ 2006 or other recent year pennies.
Is the stamping impression the same?
File a spot on the edeges of each and compare the core laminate material(s). This should show a marked(?) difference in color and hardness.
It is possible they are test coins. See if your banks has a roll (of fifty) new pennies that you can buy.
Where have you been?? In 1982 the government switched from primarily copper to a copper-coated zinc planchet.
Part of the reason coins look so “cheap” today is that the dies used to strike coins were changed, along with the presses, and hence the force needed to impress the image, this speeds the process. If you compare pennies, nickles and cents from earlier issues you’ll notice a big difference in the relief of the coin, the newer ones look flat.
Just a note in passing that the change in 1857 was not merely from bronze to copper-nickel, but also one of size. The pre-1857 coins were “large cents” approximating the size of a quarter. (Any Newfie Dopers: if you’ve ever held a Newfie 20c piece from before joining Confederation, it’s almost precisely the right size.) In 1857 (with pattern pieces struck in 1856) the Mint changed to the present “small cent” size, which has been adhered to in dimensions ever since. These were the “shield” pennies, with an obverse featuring a shield with a chief of stars and vertical stripes. In 1859 (I think) the design was switched to the Indian-head cent that was issued until Lincoln’s hundredth birthday in 1909, when the present obverse was adopted. (Reverse was wheat ears surrounding “ONE CENT” for the first 50 years of coinage, changed in 1959 to the present Lincoln Memorial, and the presence or absence of the initials of designer Victor D. Brenner occasioned two other minor changes.)
i’ve been right here. These new pennies look and feel cheaper than other relatively new pennies. as i say, they look and feel aluminum-ish. Even the zinc-copper pennies had some heft to them.
I think they weigh the same, at least since '82. Both copper and zinc versions were produced that year, but after that - should be virtually identical.
I’d have to agree with others that you’re just imagining the weight difference. Take 10 random date cents from your pocket and see if you can get someone(a friendly jeweler?) to weight them. I think you’ll find they all weigh the same since 1982.