Poging GOUD - Vrij
How To Straighten Bent Silver Coins
Treasure Hunting magazine
|December 2017
It always makes me think when I see the huge ploughs, rotavators and other farm machinery ripping through the soil, “It is little wonder that the humble, usually thin, hammered silver coin suffers so many various injuries.”

How many times over the passing centuries has the plough share moved them around? They get scratched, more so in really stony ground – caught by the plough share, the disc and the harrow – and correspondingly bent, twisted and torn. If the rotavator catches them and flings them through the air they can potentially end up in a really bad state and there is no reason why this should not happen several times to a single coin. Most silver coins, however, miraculously survive somewhat unscathed – although this survival is of course subject to both a matter of time and chance.
If you haven’t already found a bent silver coin don’t worry, I’m sure you will! Of course the proverbial sod’s law says that the bent one will always be one of the rarer types.
I once found a hammered coin of Off a (Fig.1) that initially looked like a candidate for the silver scrap box. It was bent almost double and torn, with about 15% missing and had severe cracks across it – some so bad you could see right through them. Of course with reference to the previously mentioned law, this turned out to be a unique Off a Rex type coin (Fig.2). However, I did manage to rescue it and it now sits in someone’s coin collection.
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