This is a simple google engine search which you can easily do it.
MANY of you are unable to differentiate the "hand engraving master stainless steel die" which use to mint/strike the coin and "plaster/clay die & 3D scanning engraving die." This happen to myself too.
Here the interesting article to help to understand and differentiate it. It tells you the history and development of America mint minting dies and processes from 18th century till now.
Badon has always mention the "hand engraving master stainless steel die" which pagoda and gold fish non fiat coin as examples. As at now, Shanghai mint still preserve this technology for certain non fiat coins BUT the most are few items per years. OTHERS mints always use "plaster/clay models & 3D scanning engraving model than transfer to master stainless steel die". Many North Korea coins are using ""hand engraving master stainless steel die" till now due to the cheap and excessive labor.
At this modern days the china official mints and private mints use has the option to continue to make physical plaster/clay model of the coin designs, or they can use sophisticated computer programs to make 3-D computer models of a coin’s design. If the engraver does choose to create the physical plaster/clay model than the models must scan into the computer using special 3-D scanning equipment than to the transfer to master stainless steel die for minting/striking the coin. Whether produced from scratch on the computer or created as a physical plaster/clay model, the coin design ultimately ends up as a 3-D computer image and use computer program in touching up and fine tuning. This means NO actual hand engraving master stainless steel die at all.




MANY of you are unable to differentiate the "hand engraving master stainless steel die" which use to mint/strike the coin and "plaster/clay die & 3D scanning engraving die." This happen to myself too.
Here the interesting article to help to understand and differentiate it. It tells you the history and development of America mint minting dies and processes from 18th century till now.
Badon has always mention the "hand engraving master stainless steel die" which pagoda and gold fish non fiat coin as examples. As at now, Shanghai mint still preserve this technology for certain non fiat coins BUT the most are few items per years. OTHERS mints always use "plaster/clay models & 3D scanning engraving model than transfer to master stainless steel die". Many North Korea coins are using ""hand engraving master stainless steel die" till now due to the cheap and excessive labor.
At this modern days the china official mints and private mints use has the option to continue to make physical plaster/clay model of the coin designs, or they can use sophisticated computer programs to make 3-D computer models of a coin’s design. If the engraver does choose to create the physical plaster/clay model than the models must scan into the computer using special 3-D scanning equipment than to the transfer to master stainless steel die for minting/striking the coin. Whether produced from scratch on the computer or created as a physical plaster/clay model, the coin design ultimately ends up as a 3-D computer image and use computer program in touching up and fine tuning. This means NO actual hand engraving master stainless steel die at all.



