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How Long To Soak A Coin In Acetone?

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 Posted 02/10/2010  07:09 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Sap to your friends list
I think it's best to avoid any kind of rubbing, unless the goo won't come off by any other means.

If acetone is going to work at all, it's going to work pretty quickly. If it hasn't at least started to work within a minute, I doubt a longer soak is going to do much good. For stubborn goo, I prefer to agitate the acetone - stir it up (preferably not by a means that could damage the coin). I usually use an eyedropper or pasteur pipette to squirt a jet of acetone repeatedly onto the affected area while the coin is submerged in the acetone bath.
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 Posted 02/10/2010  11:31 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add steve199 to your friends list

Quote:
I think it's best to avoid any kind of rubbing, unless the goo won't come off by any other means.


I agree...and touching it with a finger could cause something much more annoying than a little goo: a permanent fingerprint.
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 Posted 02/10/2010  12:34 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add biokemist6 to your friends list

Quote:
Both eraser and glue is softer than metal so no fear of scratches there

Erasers contain abrasives, that is how they erase. Glue or tape residue can also have tiny bits of grit bound to it, any physical rubbing will create scratches/hairlines.
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 Posted 02/11/2010  11:13 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add just carl to your friends list

Quote:
If acetone is going to work at all, it's going to work pretty quickly. If it hasn't at least started to work within a minute, I doubt a longer soak is going to do much good. For stubborn goo, I prefer to agitate the acetone - stir it up (preferably not by a means that could damage the coin). I usually use an eyedropper or pasteur pipette to squirt a jet of acetone repeatedly onto the affected area while the coin is submerged in the acetone bath.

Best advise. Just make sure the item used to agitate the Acetone is Glass and clean. And don't forget to flip the coin occationally.
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 Posted 02/11/2010  3:01 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add stumpy041486 to your friends list
thanks for the replies. I have had a coins soaking in acetone for a couple of days now. Some of the stuff came off, but not all of it. What is next GOO GONE, oil, xylene?
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 Posted 02/12/2010  10:21 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add just carl to your friends list

Quote:

thanks for the replies. I have had a coins soaking in acetone for a couple of days now. Some of the stuff came off, but not all of it. What is next GOO GONE, oil, xylene?


It may well be worth time to start figuring out the value of the coin versus the cost of all the stuff attempting to clean it. Also, your time doing this. If such coins are not worth a lot, continuous purchasing of chemicals just to clean a coin or two may not be a good idea. Also, note that as you progress in this cleaning process, you may also demimish the coins actual value if the cleaning becomes excssive.
Some tapes also dissolve in Alcohol. Note you can also purchse this from Walmart, Kmart, Target, etc. Also, note the different strengths of that solution so if you want to try that, purchase the minimum of 70%. Soak the coin in this similar to Acetone for a period of time and then don't forget to rinse with distilled water.
Of course a Butane torch is sort of a sure method to remove sticky stuff on coins. Smalll arc welder torches work too but the coins tend to become a lump. On Copper coins battery Acid works too.
Just kidding you know.
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 Posted 02/12/2010  10:19 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add BadThad to your friends list

Quote:
thanks for the replies. I have had a coins soaking in acetone for a couple of days now. Some of the stuff came off, but not all of it. What is next GOO GONE, oil, xylene?


Water, which should have been your first step.
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 Posted 02/12/2010  11:11 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Metalman to your friends list
anything that does not come off in a few seconds in acetone will not come off with acetone.

time has no effect on the outcome.
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 Posted 02/12/2010  11:13 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Metalman to your friends list
I should have mentioned that thads approach and recommendations align with mine.
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 Posted 02/13/2010  06:19 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add tomcorona to your friends list
Lighter fluid works well and is similar to GooGone.
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 Posted 02/13/2010  1:33 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add BadThad to your friends list
Sorry Tom, that is incorrect. Lighter fluid is a lipophilic hydrocarbon, namely butane (CH3CH2CH2CH3). It's mostly a mixture of the two butane isomers n-butane and isobutane. Whereas GooGone is cyclic, xylene based. They are NOTHING alike.
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 Posted 02/13/2010  6:14 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add tomcorona to your friends list
Pardon me. I wasn't referring to the molecular breakdown. I meant that the two (lighter fluid and GooGone) produce similar results. Lighter fluid DOES work better however. I've had this dance before and I'm not interested in having it again, but the folks that say it doesn't work haven't tried it. I stand corrected on the chemical breakdown though, but that wasn't my point.
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 Posted 02/14/2010  01:22 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add BadThad to your friends list
That's cool, I just like to be technical.
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 Posted 04/15/2010  10:10 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Sokol to your friends list
Accurately separate
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 Posted 04/15/2010  10:46 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add just carl to your friends list

Quote:
Pardon me. I wasn't referring to the molecular breakdown. I meant that the two (lighter fluid and GooGone) produce similar results. Lighter fluid DOES work better however. I've had this dance before and I'm not interested in having it again, but the folks that say it doesn't work haven't tried it. I stand corrected on the chemical breakdown though, but that wasn't my point.


You may or may not be correct but remember that not all lighter fluids are the same. If you can find and purchase several different brands you may want to read the lables carefully. So what has worked for you in the past may not work for others and even you if you change brands.
As to Acetone, I've left coins in Acetone for weeks with little to no effects. However, although it has been mentioned many times that Acetone will not effect coins, when those were removed from the Actone, one Large Cent and one Indian Head cent turned a REAL RED. Not the so called red of a new penny, an actual RED. Numersou other coins in that same jar came out as they went in, no change at all. Although may have had some reaction with the other coins in that same jar.
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