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Replies: 16 / Views: 2,420 |
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Pillar of the Community
 United Kingdom
4208 Posts |
Thanks for the tip - I've been looking for some distilled water. Ill try a 'health foods' shop.
The reverse has buckets of character - but the obverse the encrustation covers just Eudoxia's face! Pretty annoying. And its a coin with great ornate clothing pictured, unlike what you usually get (low grade and bland!).
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Pillar of the Community
United States
870 Posts |
I agree. Distilled water is the mildest treatment you can apply. Just keep changing the water every couple of days and soak until the encrustation comes off. May take weeks.
You should be able to get it at any grocery store. Not sure why you would have any trouble finding it.
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Pillar of the Community
United Kingdom
2838 Posts |
Quote: I've been looking for some distilled water Try a petrol station, most carry deionized water, should be about 50p per litre, same as distilled for the purpose you need it for. For some reason distilled is hard to find these days 
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Valued Member
United Kingdom
449 Posts |
As your in the UK you might have a local 99p store?( http://www.99pstoresltd.com/index.asp) My local one sells 2 litre plastic cans of deionized water used for ironing down the household aisle.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
870 Posts |
Strange that it would be so hard for you to find. All stores here carry it. check in the laundry supply area. It is used in clothes irons.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
567 Posts |
"Nursery water" that they sell in the baby section is good also.
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New Member
United States
31 Posts |
I know its winter here and in the UK, but I always get my distilled water from the dehumidifier or air conditioner. The water from these are already distilled, and free.
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Moderator
 United States
23522 Posts |
Given that it's limestone and therefore porous, wouldn't a soaking-freezing-resoaking cycle work? That shouldn't affect the original metal at all.
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Pillar of the Community
 United Kingdom
4208 Posts |
I found some (trudged through about every shop in town). sold as Deionized water for cars. Says if ingested seek medical help immediately, which is an odd thing for a bottle of distilled water. Eh.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
5155 Posts |
If it says that it provably has sone kind of coolent or anti freeze in it.
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Pillar of the Community
 United Kingdom
4208 Posts |
Well, it smells as you'd expect and its rated for irons, so it shouldnt have anti freeze. And Sorry dave - didnt see your response (posted as I posted) - Ill try that. First I'm going to try heating up the water to try and get it to soak some water up before I freeze it.
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Pillar of the Community
United Kingdom
2838 Posts |
I'm not sure why most sellers have switched from distilled to deionized over here but seem to remember someone telling me its a cheaper/easier process to produce it? Never say to a chemist that they are the same thing thing but for what we use it for the difference is not worth worrying about, indeed DI water is often purer than distilled and that is a good thing. As close to H2O as possible is what you want and sadly tap water has all sorts of other things in it. The car reference is for radiators and batteries but many people now say tap water is better for radiators as its not as 'hungry' for ions (can corrode from the inside) and most batteries are sealed. Its a bit pointless really unless you intend to keep your motor for a long time as its unlikely to do any real harm for about a decade. In the end your just choosing between death by corrosion or death by scaling! Anti-freeze needs to be added to it when it goes in the radiator and is not present before. I used to use it to refill fork truck batteries, much like household irons you don't want anything else in the water that could cause scaling as it evaporates. Quote: Says if ingested seek medical help immediately Although pure it could still have bacteria in it, guess the manufactures are just covering themselves, I bet I drink worse at my local every weekend 
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Pillar of the Community
Australia
2830 Posts |
I suppose it depends on the air quality where you live, but I collect rainwater, and leave it a few days, for the dust to settle out of it. I've been informed that this is as good as anything bought in a shop.
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Pillar of the Community
 United Kingdom
4208 Posts |
Peter_thomas - it is indeed distilled, but a lot of stuff gets in it while its up there and un-distills it. The main worry I would have with that is acidity but it would most likely not make a difference
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Bedrock of the Community
Australia
21788 Posts |
If you have ingested some distilled water, I agree that if you think that stuff causes harm, you SHOULD seek medical attention. A psychiatrist. There is something wrong with your thinking.
SsuperDdave has a good angle. To assist the water, it may help to pick at the encrustation before you soak it. This approach may help with frost shattering.
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