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Question For Badthad (And Others) About Conserving Lincoln Cents

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 Posted 08/01/2016  6:11 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add dd27 to your friends list
Awesome - thanks BadThad!

And thanks jbuck for moving to the correct location.
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 Posted 08/01/2016  6:26 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jbuck to your friends list
No problem. I knew it would be easier to catch him here.
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 Posted 08/01/2016  6:57 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Coinfrog to your friends list
Just one man's opinion, but I always start my cleaning by letting a coin soak in olive oil for awhile and then use a wood toothpick to dislodge foreign material.
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 Posted 08/01/2016  8:07 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add BadThad to your friends list
How do you remove the olive oil?
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 Posted 08/01/2016  8:25 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add cladking to your friends list

Quote:
How do you remove the olive oil?


This is why I avoid olive oil. You can't get it off. It looks Ok but it won't stay looking OK.

Olive oil will take off some things nothing else will but at a potentially high cost.

My best luck getting it off is to just expose it to air for a long time (like on top of the furnace). Then use detergent on it and expose it once more.
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 Posted 08/01/2016  8:45 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add GR58 to your friends list
I have been cleaning coins for decades. Sometimes with success,
sometimes not so good.

After rereading Badthads previous post, it really makes since.

Trying to restore a coin without doing further harm seems like the
best approach.

I do feel once a coin is so far gone, more harsh procedures might be
all that is left to try. For example, I see this for a lot of dug coins.
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 Posted 08/02/2016  4:51 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Coinfrog to your friends list
All I can say is I've had great luck with olive oil and a Q-tip or wood toothpick. I just pat the coin dry with a Kleenex. Eventually the oil will evaporate but acetone will remove it if needed.

As for olive oil being only for foods, not so. Check the label on most extra-virgin varieties and you will generally see text like "great for coin cleaning, etc."
Edited by Coinfrog
08/02/2016 4:52 pm
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 Posted 08/02/2016  7:49 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add mdrosophila to your friends list
I would add that acetone will accelerate toning for coin surface contacting with hairs. I do not know what are on the hair. It left behind a toning line or spots on the coin surface contacted with hairs.
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 Posted 08/03/2016  11:37 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add BadThad to your friends list

Quote:
Eventually the oil will evaporate but acetone will remove it if needed.


Oils do not evaporate and they are insoluble in acetone.
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 Posted 08/03/2016  11:58 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add KenRingold to your friends list
Wouldn't Dawn dish soap remove the oil? A little soapy water?
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 Posted 08/03/2016  7:02 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add just carl to your friends list

Quote:
How do you remove the olive oil?

No problem. Simply put those coins with Olive Oil in a bath used to clean auto parts. Then add a touch of Sulfuric Acid. Now remove coins and rinse with Acetone, then rinse again with Baking Soda and water paste, then with tap water from a water softener. Rub with Lettuce so as to save any left over Olive Oil so can be used in a salad.
OR just don't use Olive Oil or any oils on coins.
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 Posted 08/03/2016  8:43 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add T-BOP to your friends list
Please don't remind me about using olive oil to clean coins . When I was in my young and stupid days I tried cleaning a bunch of dug wheat's with a pot of very hot olive oil on the stove , well guess what ? the pot of oil got so hot it caught on fire . I burnt my hand trying to put the fire out, almost burnt my mothers cabinets .
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 Posted 08/04/2016  5:05 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Coinfrog to your friends list
I'll be slinking back to my cave, but will always love olive oil for treating copper.
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