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Replies: 46 / Views: 8,015 |
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Pillar of the Community
United States
4541 Posts |
well I dont know what happened to steves post but I got my coin today thanks a lot it looks ok
Edited by daviscfad 10/01/2008 12:51 pm
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Valued Member
United States
92 Posts |
I asked him for a free restored nickel too and got it yesterday. Pretty nice, actually. I sent him an email and asked what happened to his posts. He said they were taken down because the forum said he was trying to advertise for free on their site. Too bad because the guy's got an interesting site and he really is giving away free nickels with no strings attached.
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New Member
United States
5 Posts |
Zoom - are you serious? Acid dated nickels look horrible. James Fraser would turn over in his grave if he could see those big ugly date spots.
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Valued Member
United States
419 Posts |
bq I didn't see where you told how to use the vinegar to get the date to restore. What kind of vinegar do you use and what is your process?
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Pillar of the Community
United States
3294 Posts |
standard vinegar is only 5%, maybe you need to use the pickling vinegar which is 3x stronger?
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Valued Member
United States
92 Posts |
jfr - This guy restores the whole nickel not just the date. I'm telling you, I have one of his coins right here in my hand and it looks great. No gross looking acid mark by the date. The coin is uniform looking and even has a full horn! The one he gave me is just a plain old 1916 P-mint, but the key word there is GAVE. He was giving these things away as samples of his work before his posts were taken down. His website even describes part of what he does to get them to look like this. You said Fraser would turn over in his grave... he actually talks about that in his website.
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Valued Member
United States
296 Posts |
I got my free sample from Steve today. It looks good to me. The color is uniform, maybe a little too uniform. If I were collecting buffaloes and was on a tight budget, I would consider restored coins.
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Bedrock of the Community
Canada
10743 Posts |
I received mine today too, it looks fine to me. 
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New Member
United States
5 Posts |
I gotta tell you that I'm having a hard time believing they look very good. Does anyone know what his website address is?
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2734 Posts |
http://www.buffaloreincarnations.com/I 'found' that I have a 1917-S when I gave it a vinegar bath. It looks a lot better than a Nic-A-Date burn, but not as nice as Steve's restored Nickels on that website.
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Valued Member
United States
419 Posts |
How long do you leave it in the vinegar?
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New Member
United States
5 Posts |
Thanks for the website address but I don't know. I looked at the nickels in his photo gallery and they looked a little to good, like he's doctoring the photos or something.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
4541 Posts |
i wish I could find mine I would post a picture I set it down somewhere and cant find it...
J
Mine look like the picture the only difference mine has a wood look like a grain look in a way
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2734 Posts |
Quote: "How long do you leave it in the vinegar?" Check it hourly, when you can read a faint date, you're done. Wash the Nickel in soap & water, then dry. It took 3 hours for my Nickel. The nice thing with a 'weak' acid like vinegar is that the coin looks 'natural', and it doesn't involve toxic substances and hours of work like the full-out 'restoration'.
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New Member
United States
5 Posts |
I finally got around to looking at the nickel Steve sent me and I've got to say it looks just like his photos on his website. Really quite nice. I'm nit sure how he does it but on his website he says it takes one hour per coin on average. He doesn't say what the chemical is that he uses, only that it's not Nic-a-date. He's got a photo of the chemicals he uses but has the labels turned away from the camera. It doesn't lool like vinegar in the photo.
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Replies: 46 / Views: 8,015 |