Flow lines that occur during the coin striking process cause the cartwheel effect by reflecting the light off the surface of the coin. The effect is somewhat fragile and will disappear due to circulation or if the coin is cleaned. Coin collectors also refer to this as “mint luster.” More recently, The United States Mint began using a special treatment on the coin dies. This gives more of a matte finish to the coin instead of the cartwheel effect. Additionally, the America the Beautiful five-ounce silver collector coins received a special vapor blast treatment after the coin was struck. This process gave each bullion coin a deep matte finish. This word is not to be confused with the coin collecting term “cartwheel” that is a slang term for large American silver dollar coins, usually a Morgan silver dollars. People used the term mostly in the late 1800s and the early 1900s. Very few people refer to silver dollars as cartwheels anymore.
How to See the Cartwheel Effect
To observe the cartwheel effect on an uncirculated coin, follow these easy steps:
The Cartwheel Effect and Coin Grading
The cartwheel effect is an essential part of determining the condition or grade of a coin. As a coin circulates in commerce, the highest points on the coin will contact other coins and surfaces that will obliterate the flow lines that cause the cartwheel effect to appear. With the flowlines obliterated, the cartwheel effect will not be present in those areas of the coin. Therefore, the lack of mint luster on the highest points of the coin is one of the first indications that a coin has seen circulation in commerce and therefore cannot be classified as uncirculated. Additionally, since the microscopic flowlines that cause the cartwheel effect are extremely delicate continuous chemical cleaning or some other abrasive type of cleaning of the coin will damage or obliterate these flowlines. Therefore, a coin may seem uncirculated because all of its details are still intact, but improper cleaning has destroyed the flowlines. Hence, the cartwheel will no longer be observable on that coin. Chemical cleaning can also impact the mint luster of a coin. Although proper conservation can preserve and enhance the cartwheel effect, improper use of conservation chemicals or highly acidic chemicals can damage the fragile striations on the surface of the coin that gives us the cartwheel effect. In addition, repeated cleaning with harsh chemicals can dull the coin’s luster and reduce its value.
Mint Luster on Proof Coins
Proof coins are minted using a special process that involves specially prepared dies and polished coin planchets. The field of the coin is usually mirror-like, and the devices are frosted. On reverse Proof coins, the field is frosted, and the devices are polished to a mirrorlike reflectivity. Before 1972, only the first hundred Proof coins from a fresh set of coin dies had this frosted and mirrorlike surface combination. As the coin dies continued to be used, the microscopic frost would deteriorate into the highly polished reflective surfaces. Additionally, the tremendous pressure used in striking Proof coins led to microscopic striations across the field and devices on the die. The striking process would then transfer these striations to the Proof coins. Therefore, you can see the cartwheel effect on Proof coins given the proper lighting conditions. However, it is not blatantly obvious like it is on an uncirculated coin. Additionally, the very first coins will have no striations at all, and it will be impossible to see the cartwheel effect. The existence of these microscopic striations across the surface of a Proof coin is more of an indication of a coin die in the later stages of its useful life. Edited by: James Bucki