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Acetone Vs Xylene

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John1's Avatar
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 Posted 11/07/2015  3:10 pm Show Profile   Bookmark this topic Add John1 to your friends list Get a Link to this Message Number of Subscribers
Pros & cons of each please. Thanks much,
John1
Edited by John1
11/08/2015 05:09 am
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Coinfrog's Avatar
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 Posted 11/07/2015  7:10 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Coinfrog to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
They have quite different properties.

Acetone is best for treating coins because it evaporates much faster with no residue. It is a pure substance, unlike Zylene.
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gymcoachdon's Avatar
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 Posted 11/07/2015  7:25 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add gymcoachdon to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
From BadThad:

Acetone is what's called a "polar organic solvent". That is, it has a positive and negative charge on it. Because of it's polarity, it is completely miscible with water. It has a ability to dissolve polar AND non-polar (no charge) surface residues. However, it is pretty limited in the non-polar compounds it can dissolve.

Xylene is a completely non-polar solvent. It is non-miscible with water, that is water will form a separate layer when mixed with xylene. It's a much better choice for most surface residues because they are typically non-polar. However, since it is so non-polar, it also has more of an ability to remove a natural patina....especially when over used. This is why many collectors stick with only using acetone.

In general, I've always found xylene to be a much better solvent for copper. It's rare that acetone can help a copper coin.
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vermontensium's Avatar
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 Posted 11/07/2015  7:39 pm  Show Profile   Check vermontensium's eBay Listings Check vermontensium's eCrater Listings Bookmark this reply Add vermontensium to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Xylene is nasty, nasty stuff.
DO NOT use indoors..ever.
I made that mistake once. Oh man!
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Sap's Avatar
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 Posted 11/08/2015  03:37 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Sap to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Xylene is always spelled with an "X", never a "Z". If you find something being sold as "zylene", then it's probably got no more xylene in it that something calling itself "froot jooce" has actual fruit juice in it.

Another thing to point out comparing the two: disposal of waste. Acetone is quite volatile (it evaporates easily) plus it's water-soluble, so you can either let it evaporate away competely or wash any residue and leftover acetone down the sink with plenty of water.

Xylene is much less volatile and non-water-soluble. It won't evaporate away anywhere near as fast, and it won't simply wash away in water.

The stuff marketed and sold as "xylene" is usually a mixture of three chemicals that have similar properties but are technically different: ortho-xylene, meta-xylene and para-xylene. It usually also contains a percentage of ethylbenzene as well. The fact that it's a mixture doesn't detract from its ability to clean coins; buying pure otho-xylene would work just as well, but cost five times as much because it's a pain to separate them.
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John1's Avatar
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 Posted 11/08/2015  05:13 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add John1 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Thank you all for the info. I missed spelled Xylene in my title sorry. So I will stick with Acetone.
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jbuck's Avatar
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 Posted 11/09/2015  09:54 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jbuck to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Title fixed. Cannot believe I missed it the other night.


Froot Jooce.
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