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Replies: 21 / Views: 4,429 |
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Valued Member
Canada
496 Posts |
Your finds are some of the best that I've seen dug.You are fortunate,or a very busy detectorist,to have found coins lost so soon after minting.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
6370 Posts |
Very nice! 
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Moderator
 United States
16680 Posts |
Why I wish I lived on the East coast. Your not finding Colonials here in California :-( Great finds!
swcoin.ecrater.com
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Valued Member
United States
62 Posts |
Edited by tedster 02/17/2016 3:24 pm
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Moderator
 United States
34447 Posts |
Very nice nj copper!
"If you climb a good tree, you get a push." -----Ghanaian proverb
"The danger we all now face is distinguishing between what is authentic and what is performed." -----King Adz
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Valued Member
 United States
118 Posts |
Thanks for all the comments Guys, as for cleaning methods it varies from coin to coin but after doing this for 25 years you get to know what will and won't work on certain coins. I had a lot of practice on the hundreds of King George 1/2 pennies I've found too  Two things I learned over the years are no amount of cleaning will help a coin that doesn't have a solid surface under the crust and don't do any cleaning in the field to try to see a date or make an identification. There's a big difference between dug coppers and non dug in the thickness of the patina. On a non dug copper one or two wipes with anything and your down to bare shiny copper where a dug copper can be rubbed and scrubbed pretty hard and still keep it's dark surface color. The 1864 L Indian head was pretty crusty, don't have a before picture of it but I used several hot hydrogen peroxide soaks on it followed by some tooth picking and brushing with what's called a trachea brush. It's used in doctors offices and looks like a real small bottle brush with fine tight together nylon bristles. Next I use Never Dull magic wadding polish, it says it has petroleum distillates in it and is very good at removing the crust on dug coppers. After that, more brushing then I heat the coin enough to melt wax on it then work it in with thumb and finger for a good long while. The wax actually cleans the surface and smooths any rough spots. After that, another heating and a cloth wiping to remove any excess wax. The silvers are usually easy you just need to apply the rule of no field cleaning. I usually just soak them in water and rinse under the faucet letting the falling water do the cleaning, no rubbing or brushing. Sometimes you'll get a tough one like this 1833 Half Dime that needed extra help.  For this one I soaked it in a mild acid product called aluminum jelly and gently worked it in with thumb and finger to get the crust to turn loose then patted it with the never dull wadding until the color was evened out. now it was clean but too clean looking for my liking so I gave it an artificial antiquing. I've got more of these before and after pictures and tons more dug coin pictures if you guys want to see them let me know.
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Pillar of the Community
681 Posts |
What machine do you swing and where do you live?
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Rest in Peace
United States
18456 Posts |
SCDave , your cleaning method is unbelievable . totally outrageous. I have never seen dug coins look so good. Please show us more !
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Rest in Peace
United States
17900 Posts |
Appears you could get a coin conservation job in a heartbeat. Magnificent coins and superb conservation.
Ever hit gold?
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Valued Member
 United States
118 Posts |
Go-Rebels I'm in South Carolina but most of these coins were dug when I lived in central Connecticut. I'm swinging an XP Deus now but almost all these were dug with my trusty old blue Minelab Musketeer. I still say that old machine will hunt with the best of them especially up north where the hot rocks are bad. We get old coins here in SC but it's more silver (Mexican reals & Seated coins) than copper and when you do dig coppers they're usually King George 11 & 111 Irish issues. vermontensium your over there where they dig all the gold coins! A friend of mine hunts old mining areas and has found several gold pieces and some large nuggets too T-BOP you can have all my old digging spots in CT. I went back to some of them last summer with my new super duper Deus and couldn't dig squat.  I did find a couple new spots and dug some nice stuff though. Jersey Ben, nice Washington Inaugural avatar, I've got the 15 star WI-18b 2 of the 12-C's and a new variety of the WI-23 Silverstien calls it a 23-b. I still haven't figured which I like digging more, coins or buttons but I know I've dug more valuable buttons than high dollar coins.
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Valued Member
 United States
118 Posts |
moxking Thanks for that comment, I'd really enjoy a job messing with coins all day ! As for gold, a good bit of jewelry but only one gold coin and had to go to England to dig it.  It's an 1826 George IV 1/2 sovereign AU wear wise but the plow took it's toll on it. It was a good trip I got the gold, an Augustus Ceaser (27 bc-14ad) silver denarius, Roman bronzes, a dozen medieval hammered silvers, a few early milled silvers, a pile of King Georges and all kinds of cool artifacts.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
3185 Posts |
Quote: tons more dug coin pictures if you guys want to see them let me know We love coin pics, more please 
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
3058 Posts |
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Pillar of the Community
United States
3229 Posts |
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Pillar of the Community
United States
591 Posts |
Wow, SCDave this is AWESOME! I'm bookmarking this post. I have been wanting to coin shoot for years now, but am so busy with all my other commitments (work and family). Are you retired? One of these days I'll get a machine and give it a whorl. I could look at dug coins like this all day, please post more. And thanks for posting on "US Classic Coins" and not the metal detecting page (which I look at less and would have likely missed this). 
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Replies: 21 / Views: 4,429 |
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