Light silver surfaces with considerable lustre and very faint champagne toning. Just four finer examples were recorded among 16 coins listed in the Census. This is a scarce variety that is hard to locate in any grade.

Heavy crack from I across face and neck to drapery. Other prominent cracks connect some stars and join stars to border. The reverse has a die chip below the crossbar of F along with several rust pits below the scroll.

This variety was struck after all but one die marriage dated 1830, and was struck after several 1831 varieties! This is the sixth use of obverse 4 and the fourth use of reverse M. The emission sequence for this reverse presents a very confused view of coinage at the time: 1831 LM-3, 1830 LM-11, 1830 LM-13, 1829 LM-18, 1831 LM-4, 1831 LM-7, 1832 LM-1, 1832 LM-2.