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User avatar #220 - commanderbunbun (09/25/2012) [-]
i'm an american and what is this?



i mean, separating those two parts of that coin seemed impossible to me. how'd he do it?
#232 to #220 - ABjerre (09/25/2012) [-]
I would think that he had 2 coins to begin with and then milled the inner "disc" out of one and machined the outer "ring" off the other to create a perfect fit that would appear to be a single coin.

Or he used a plasma or laser cutter. Those are really accurate.
#252 to #232 - Jimminycracker (09/25/2012) [-]
**Jimminycracker rolled a random image posted in comment #242381 at Anime & Manga ** mfw I gotta go to work in 20 minutes and run one of those things for the next 8 hours.
User avatar #248 to #232 - scorcho (09/25/2012) [-]
nope. the coin actually consists of two parts. if you apply enough pressure you can separate them
#251 to #248 - ABjerre (09/25/2012) [-]
Ah, simplicity!

I'm from Denmark, and while our coins also resemble a rim on them, the are made from a single piece. I had assumed that the euro coins had a similar structure.
#262 to #251 - N. Korean citizen (09/25/2012) [-]
Hah! Nice to see other danish people arond here.
User avatar #245 to #232 - microfan (09/25/2012) [-]
no we have similar money and it just needs a lot of force or heat
User avatar #242 to #232 - forasecond (09/25/2012) [-]
what
User avatar #240 to #232 - drhoffable (09/25/2012) [-]
what
#239 to #232 - N. Korean citizen (09/25/2012) [-]
what
#234 to #233 - ABjerre (09/25/2012) [-]
MS Paint incoming!

2 coins.

Remove the red area, keep the green. This gives the illusion of having made the cut out of a single coin.
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