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Cleaning A Misc Box Of Coins

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BenHalfRocks's Avatar
United States
18 Posts
 Posted 06/22/2012  10:55 pm Show Profile   Bookmark this topic Add BenHalfRocks to your friends list Get a Link to this Message Number of Subscribers
Thanks for reading. How should I go about this? Grandpa did us all proud serving in the Navy traveling all over the world in the 30s and 40s. I just got this box of coins from him. I have read many posts here about cleaning, but it's overwhelming to know what to do.

The coins are dirty but not gunky. Some are worn, some are still very detailed. Is regular soap and water a no-no? How can I start to look into a coin with symbols I don't understand? And from so many different places? {deep breath}

Cleaning--A-Misc-Box-Of-Coins

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Silvernut's Avatar
Australia
48 Posts
 Posted 06/22/2012  11:07 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Silvernut to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Nice looking coins there. Looks like you'll have some silveres there as well!

You could start out by cleaning them with warm water and dishwashing liquid. It is said that a coin retains it most value, and is more desirable by collectors if cleaning is kept to a minimum - if at all!

If some of your coins are built up with gunk and crap, you can soak them in olive oil for a week or so then gently use a toothpick to get the crap out of the lettering and such. I finally clean with cotton balls and/or tips.

BTW: Never use a toothbrush!!
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enworb's Avatar
Australia
4411 Posts
 Posted 06/22/2012  11:19 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add enworb to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Don't clean any of them!

For know separate them into ones you can understand the symbols and those you cant.

Identify the countries you can.

Those you cant identify type in the inscriptions into google and you should have a shot at identifying some.

If you are really stuck then post them on CCF with pictures and people will help you.

Main thing is until you know what you have DONT CLEAN THEM AT ALL!
Edited by enworb
06/22/2012 11:19 pm
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daniels's Avatar
United States
1620 Posts
 Posted 06/22/2012  11:24 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add daniels to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I would sort out the coins take them out of that tin separate them and do some research on them for all you know they might not be worth anything take some pics of them and post in the proper forum and someone will help u
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United States
3184 Posts
 Posted 06/22/2012  11:27 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add mkman123 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Do not clean anything pls!!
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amida17's Avatar
United States
4897 Posts
 Posted 06/22/2012  11:30 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add amida17 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
to CCF!
with enworb....Please DO NOT clean them in ANY regard!

Seperate them the best you can and ask questions here....or...bring them to a library and use Krause's Standard Book of World Coins to identify them.
Edited by amida17
06/22/2012 11:32 pm
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BenHalfRocks's Avatar
United States
18 Posts
 Posted 06/23/2012  12:05 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add BenHalfRocks to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Ok, I wont try to clean them. And thanks for the welcome!! (this takes me back to the runner's forum I used before I blew my knee)

I've been able to match up some of the same markings on ones I didn't think I could see anything on. It'll take some time and I'll be patient. What about a GM Motorama coin from 1954, or tax tokens from Utah and Washington, what are those worth? lol

I'll sit down with coffee in the morning and start this project. Thanks for the help.
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amida17's Avatar
United States
4897 Posts
 Posted 06/23/2012  12:16 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add amida17 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
GM motorama....like this? http://www.ebay.com/itm/TWO-2-GM-GE...em4d0043fa99


Seriously though patience and research are key to the whole coin thing! Problem with this site ( if it is a problem at all) is that we want to convert everyone who asks a question into a collector.....many here will help you learn if you want to..."education is key to collector success"....Hope you have fun and stick around....
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ninamason's Avatar
United States
1227 Posts
 Posted 06/23/2012  12:16 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add ninamason to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
WHOA!! Gorgeous!


As others have said: DON'T CLEAN THEM YET!! We'll get there in a minute, but first . . .

Not all the countries you are looking at will still have the coinage you're looking at (e.g. in the 50s, the Japanese retired the sen; the Eurozone is obvious; if anything in there is Chinese and predates Mao Zedong, 'nuff said), so be ready to dig. My first suggestion would be to divide your coins into three rough groups:

Western (Latin letters, like what you're reading this in); Middle Eastern (Arabic and Cyrillic characters); and Eastern (essentially, if it doesn't look Arabic or Russian and it's not in Latin letters, it's probably Eastern). Some Eastern countries use Latin letters (e.g. modern-day Vietnam), but that's okay--you're looking at how to make this easier on yourself, not how to be geographically correct in one easy lesson.

First, check out the Western coins, because these will be easiest. Look for words like "ein" and "une" that might give you a hint what language you're looking at ("ein" would be Germany or Austria, for example). You can type these phrases, and even completely unfamiliar ones, right into Google--a search for "Magyar" led me to the fact that I own a Hungarian coin. If you want to know more than "what country is this?", you can then refine your Google searches: "third reich germany coins," for example, or "1929 french franc coin," to learn more about your specific coins.

Next, your Eastern coins: start searching by country. "1930s japanese coins," "1930s chinese coins," etc., and use Google Images to locate the coin you're looking for. You can do this with your Middle Eastern coins, as well, but remember--names are going to be different (Persia instead of Iran; Palestine instead of Israel).

Once you know what coins you have, you can start looking at value: "What is a Japanese sen from 1945 worth?", for example. Rinse and repeat as you go. If all else fails, post some pics here--there's a whole forum for identifying trouble coins.


Now: to clean, or not to clean? Depends on the coin and the condition. I know nothing of antique coins except that some are made of gold and silver and I saw one last night from the Byzantine era that was way cool (some guy made it into a ring), so I'm not going to advise you on how to clean, if necessary--that would be a question for jbuck or someone else with his level of expertise. What I will tell you is that for modern coins, the advice I hear on this forum is pure hardware-store grade ACETONE. Please ask someone who collects antiques before you use this, though! I don't want to destroy your coins because they're made of a different metal.
Edited by ninamason
06/23/2012 12:19 am
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basebal21's Avatar
13014 Posts
 Posted 06/23/2012  12:36 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add basebal21 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I really wouldnt clean them at all even with the proper solution. If youre looking to sell them a lot of collectors would rather have the story behind the look than the cleaned look and if you arent to me at least itd be kinda cool to leave them how youre grandpa had them. But either the other thing to consider is do you really want the first coin you attempt to dip to be one of those coins. If you absolutely decide you must do it and wont have it any other way at least get some dirty pennies or something and practice doing it before trying on those.
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basebal21's Avatar
13014 Posts
 Posted 06/23/2012  12:37 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add basebal21 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Also
New Member
BenHalfRocks's Avatar
United States
18 Posts
 Posted 06/23/2012  12:46 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add BenHalfRocks to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
amida, yes, it's the round one. haha

enworb, I have a bunch with your avatar on them.

so much great information, everyone! I could spend some time here.
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basebal21's Avatar
13014 Posts
 Posted 06/23/2012  01:07 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add basebal21 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Next thing you know anytime your on the comp youll have this site open lol
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EgCollector's Avatar
Egypt
3470 Posts
 Posted 06/23/2012  02:29 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add EgCollector to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
First Sort and identify each coin before you do anything with them, especially cleaning.
Try posting pics and many will be happy to help identifying the ones you dont know.
Post pics in the grading forum and you will have an idea about their grade and value.
By this time I guarantee that you will be hooked and will stay around forever

to CCF
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enworb's Avatar
Australia
4411 Posts
 Posted 06/23/2012  04:51 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add enworb to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
If they have my avatar on the obverse than they are coins of the British commonwealth minted during the reign of King George V. Those coins are probably from Canada seeing as you're in the US but could be from Australia, India, Ceylon as well as several other countries.

I dont know what youre intentions are with the coins once you have identified them but if theyre not worth a lot of money and youre not strapped for cash then please consider keeping them. Once theyre gone theyre gone and theyre a good memory of your grandfather. If you were to get into collecting as well it would be great.
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enworb's Avatar
Australia
4411 Posts
 Posted 06/23/2012  04:54 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add enworb to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Actually I can see two Australian pennies on top of the pile. One is King George V and the other is King George VI. If your grandfather served in the US Navy during WWII he likely visited Australia as did many US servicemen. If you can take photos of them and all others that you can identify as being from Australia then you could post them in the Australian section of the forum and we could grade and value the individually for you.
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