Netherlands 10 Cent 1983 – Major Rotation Error (90° Die Axis) – Uncatalogued

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Netherlands 10 Cent 1983 – 90° Rotated Die Error
Description:
Offered here is a 10 Cent coin from the Netherlands, dated 1983, featuring a significant mint error: a rotated die axis of approximately 90 degrees.
When the coin is held upright (portrait of Queen Juliana), the reverse side appears rotated at a 90° angle instead of the standard alignment. This type of error is known as a rotated die error and is considered highly collectible, especially in such a pronounced degree.
To the best of my research, this specific error for the 1983 issue is not commonly documented in major catalogs, which may increase its numismatic interest and potential rarity.
Key details:
Country: Netherlands
Year: 1983
Denomination: 10 Cent
Error type: Rotated die (~90°)
Alignment: Incorrect (major rotation)
Condition: [coloque aqui: XF, AU, UNC, etc., conforme o estado da moeda]
Additional notes:
Photos clearly show the rotation error. The coin has not been professionally graded or certified.

 

Just to be sure. Have you ever seen Dutch coins before or at least looked at their coin pages?
N#735 

Your explanation sounds like AI sloppiness.

The coin, or all of that series of Beatrix coins have a strange looking orientation, it was actually medal orientation and the writing was readable and the queens portrait faced down, just like your coin. So I was led to believe shortly before the €uro came in, how true that is I don’t know.

However because this is weird for people to understand (because the Dutch are slightly like that in design, buildings, etc) the obverse of the coin was more accepted with the queen facing left and the writing being non readable. So the orientation was recorded as ⬆️⬅️, exactly like your coin. Stop believing AI!

 

N#735

 

„If your reply or post in the Forum stinks of AI, I will call you out! Knowledge comes from experience, the I in AI stands for incompetence.“

The photos don't show the error, but before posting the coin I did some research and this coin is truly unique because the reverse side is at a 90° angle. If you're interested, I can send a video where I can rotate it and you'll see the die is tilted at 90°. WhatsApp: 351 933 065 128. https://drive.google.com/file/d/1REl0ZwLBULNTN4D4NUni5u75HGG3TSKx/view?usp=drivesdk

Like this?

 

Yes

Robson Rangel

Yes

They made over 38 million of them that year just like it. You can see it in these pictures of the Mint's proof set.

 

  

   

Robson Rangel

Netherlands 10 Cent 1983 – 90° Rotated Die Error
Description:
Offered here is a 10 Cent coin from the Netherlands, dated 1983, featuring a significant mint error: a rotated die axis of approximately 90 degrees.
When the coin is held upright (portrait of Queen Juliana), the reverse side appears rotated at a 90° angle instead of the standard alignment. This type of error is known as a rotated die error and is considered highly collectible, especially in such a pronounced degree.
To the best of my research, this specific error for the 1983 issue is not commonly documented in major catalogs, which may increase its numismatic interest and potential rarity.
Key details:
Country: Netherlands
Year: 1983
Denomination: 10 Cent
Error type: Rotated die (~90°)
Alignment: Incorrect (major rotation)
Condition: [coloque aqui: XF, AU, UNC, etc., conforme o estado da moeda]
Additional notes:
Photos clearly show the rotation error. The coin has not been professionally graded or certified.

 

Nothing wrong there. It was designed that way, as already explained.

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