Not sure what you mean about skin oils, but once that turn black, they won't go back. mild hand soap and water to remove sticky nasty form them, and then any stuck on grime some baking soda water paste like you would use on jewelry should remove them. If you dont have a jewelry cleaner you can get a cheap ultrasonic toothbrush that takes a AA batter with a standard 3c motor with a vibrator bar on it and attach it to the side of a plastic cup to agitate the wat and baking soda.
Being a Pre$ and SAC jsut to have, not to get graded, they will stay fairly well after that if you just put them up like other coins. Just remember to rinse each time with distilled water, and dry them off so it doesn't leave a watermark.
The only reason have used 90$ isopropynol is for coins I intend to paint and want to have the surface well and clean for the paint to stick, and it was an SAC and the acrylic paint has been there for over 10 years with no flaking. No idea after this time what it looks like under the paint, but the edges of the coin don't look like they have changed much except for normal edge-wear. Probably because the edge has less surface area and wer able to dry better and the medical gloves I used to paint the coin kept buffing the edge. any tape I remove with rubbing alcohol from coins left the tape line on the halves, and those I spent long ago so have no idea what happened after, but the tape had pretty much done its damage so jsut not having the half keep sticking to my hand I sent it on its merry cleaned way.
Being a Pre$ and SAC jsut to have, not to get graded, they will stay fairly well after that if you just put them up like other coins. Just remember to rinse each time with distilled water, and dry them off so it doesn't leave a watermark.
The only reason have used 90$ isopropynol is for coins I intend to paint and want to have the surface well and clean for the paint to stick, and it was an SAC and the acrylic paint has been there for over 10 years with no flaking. No idea after this time what it looks like under the paint, but the edges of the coin don't look like they have changed much except for normal edge-wear. Probably because the edge has less surface area and wer able to dry better and the medical gloves I used to paint the coin kept buffing the edge. any tape I remove with rubbing alcohol from coins left the tape line on the halves, and those I spent long ago so have no idea what happened after, but the tape had pretty much done its damage so jsut not having the half keep sticking to my hand I sent it on its merry cleaned way.






















