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My Method To Toning A 90% Silver Coin

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 Posted 11/03/2011  4:08 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add yuengling101 to your friends list
Also, I have only tried this on 90% silver coins, I have NO idea if this will work on any other coin
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 Posted 11/03/2011  4:41 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add yuengling101 to your friends list
Im thinking about doing this to a junk Morgan dollar. Its been cleaned and only worth melt, or should I leave it alone any way ?
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 Posted 11/03/2011  5:22 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add afclassic87 to your friends list
I'd go for it! You can't really hurt it anymore than it already is.
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 Posted 11/03/2011  6:02 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add yuengling101 to your friends list
Ughh it didnt work, though I was able to make it look half decent it still looks like crap. For some reason I have a harder time with larger coins. I was only able to make 1 franklin look good out of 3 others. But quarters seem to work every time, I dont quite understand why
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 Posted 11/03/2011  6:46 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add bjones to your friends list
where's biokemist when you need him?
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 Posted 11/03/2011  6:54 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add yuengling101 to your friends list
whos biokemist ?
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 Posted 11/03/2011  6:58 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add biokemist6 to your friends list
LOL, I am right here but I certainly do not condone artificially toning and damaging coins needlessly, even if it is just junk silver.

Just some food for thought- how certain are you that it is not a 1950-D/S or a 1964-D Type C reverse quarter that you are using for experimentation? What if your junk Morgan dollar turned out to be a Top 100 VAM? Ordinary junk silver is not always so ordinary, depending who is looking at the coin.
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 Posted 11/03/2011  7:01 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Tim Stroud to your friends list

Quote:
Ordinary junk silver is not always so ordinary, depending who is looking at the coin.


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 Posted 11/03/2011  7:10 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add yuengling101 to your friends list
well I hope I didnt lol, I already posted the morgan with pics on here and every one agreed its only worth melt. but other then that I'm pretty much done with the toning deal. way to much work for such a low succses rate.
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 Posted 11/06/2011  7:13 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add lincolncentguy to your friends list
Why are you damaging coins on purpose? Thats just wrong. Some people like to buy what you call "junk" silver...but if you keep wrecking coins there wont be any nice ones for someones collection in the future.And for the first time ever I agree with biokemist6!
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 Posted 11/06/2011  8:33 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add KenRingold to your friends list
I won't purchase an artificially toned coin, and yes one can tell. And as far as those being just junk silver, they are also coins that are not in my collection and I'm sure probably others. Just because they are junk silver doesn't mean they are junk.
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 Posted 11/06/2011  8:48 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add yuengling101 to your friends list
I wouldnt buy a artificially toned coin either, I was just curious how people did it. I have no intentions to sell any of the one I succsefully toned, they will stay in my own collection. There my coins and I have the right to do what I want with them. And like I said before, know that I know how to do it I have no desire to do any more. The best thing I got out of all of this is that doing it my self, I now know of things to look for to reconize fake toned coins.
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 Posted 11/07/2011  2:10 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jbuck to your friends list

Quote:
The best thing I got out of all of this is that doing it my self, I now know of things to look for to reconize fake toned coins.
A hands-on education from experience. I have no problem with that.
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 Posted 11/07/2011  2:39 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add BadThad to your friends list


Another fun experiment is to heat coins. I've found a range top works well.
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 Posted 11/07/2011  3:12 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add hesgut to your friends list
What I find strange is that some people will pay more money for coins toned this way than if they were white. Check out ebay listings for rainbow toned coins. 90% are artificial and most get higher prices when all that's been done to them is heat damage etc.

It is a nice experiment to play around with. You should try to see if using different methods produces different colors. See if you can ever get a green toning...that's very uncommon. I'm sure there's a reason why, but my chemistry knowledge isn't good enough to know it.
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