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Replies: 48 / Views: 15,088 |
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1534 Posts |
Quote: I guess the point I'm getting at is if you knowingly recreate the circumstances for toning, regardless the method, materials, length of time, or end result... by definition it SHOULD be artificial toning. Right? In technical terms yes, but if it can pass scrutiny and appear for sale without raising any suspicion it's NT. I don't find anything wrong with accelerating toning, but there is a longtime debate that has been going on for whether speeding toning is ethically right.
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
10284 Posts |
When do we expect some beta testing Thad? Can't wait.
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Bedrock of the Community
 United States
19975 Posts |
Quote: am new here badthad I read I think here about carbon spots does verdigone clean them up? what dos it do and why do you use it?
1) Nothing can remove carbon spots without causing surface damage. 2) VERDI-GONE has been discontinued and replaced with VERDI-CAREâ„¢. 3) VERDI-GONE and VERDI-CAREâ„¢ are not cleaners and will only remove loosely adhered surface debris and verdigris. Click on the link in my sig for more information. All of the product documentation can be found on Wizard's website.
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Bedrock of the Community
 United States
19975 Posts |
ziggy and wheezy - I am still working on the product, it has a LONG way to go yet. I haven't any time the past 3 months to work on it at all. Based on my current experiments and the little time I have, this could be 2-3 years away at best. It's turning out to be very complicated chemistry wise and testing takes weeks/months to complete. It also turns out that copper tones much faster than silver, this has created some complications for me after testing on silver using the formula I showed here on copper.
I'm also fighting a moral debate, I haven't decided if I should unleash the product because of the controversy. Good thing I have plenty of time to think about it. LOL
Lincoln Cent Lover!VERDI-CARE™ INVENTOR https://verdi.care/
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
10284 Posts |
The moral debate ... Ask yourself what your goal was when you began the project. Then if you have been successful in completing your goal, call it like it is I say. I think you set out to preserve coins and possibly remove problems from coins and arrest the problems from getting worse. The toning, I can understand what some might say is artificial toning. What was your initial plan? I know you well enough Thad, it wasn't to deceive anyone. I think you might have wanted to improve coins that were dipped or cleaned and make them look more natural. I think if you market your product with what you wanted to do in the first place, go for it, that is your business. I would just be right up front with what your product is intended for in the advertisement and labeling. If you don't come up with a product that accomplishes your goal, you can bet eventually somebody else will or at least come close. Might as well be you.  If the restoration or toning formula and process is so good that is pretty much undetectable by collectors and even top grading services, then whats the difference? I say you conserved a coin and preserved it. I am sure if I had a weird orange 1909 S VDB that was improperly cleaned and your stuff would make it look almost like it normally should, where's the harm? Maybe if you are so successful, the Verdi-tone itself will become an accepted and long awaited solution to this very common problem anyway and not be frowned on at all. It's not like you are putting pretty rainbows on the coins. 
Edited by TNG 10/28/2010 5:04 pm
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Bedrock of the Community
 United States
19975 Posts |
Indeed, I see your point. My initial plan was just to see if I could do it. I had been tossing around some chemistry ideas in my head for months. After playing around with quite a few formulas, I finally came up with one that seemed to release the hydrogen sulfide at about the right rate. Those are the test coins you see posted at the start of this post.
Lincoln Cent Lover!VERDI-CARE™ INVENTOR https://verdi.care/
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Valued Member
United States
469 Posts |
I personally, would love to have a product that allows some of the cleaned copper coins I have to be restored back to as close as possible versions of their prior existence. If done well, it would be restoration as I see it. I have never tried the other products out in the market because I don't believe in their results so I am holding onto some wonderful yet off color coins. I for one, look forward to an opportunity to try it out.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
659 Posts |
what is happening with this product? can I be a tester?
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Valued Member
United States
115 Posts |
I think this sounds interesting. While it seems all serious collectors abhor the cleaning of coins it is inevitable that you run into coins that have been cleaned. These coins are unnatural in color and appearance and the in-discriminant use of cleaners mar an otherwise nice coin. Where I have run into these is when I might pick up a lot of copper coins off ebay for instance and it is obvious that someone did something at some point. To return a coin to its original appearance is no different than the original process that got it darker in the first place. So I say good luck and keep us informed. I will definitely buy some.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2764 Posts |
I am totally agreeing to wheezy's reply. I also have have some "cleaned" coins that I would like to look better in the album. Keep us update.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
880 Posts |
People put them in the window to cover up clean marks, why not have a product do it? It's just as immoral ;) haha, but like someone else said - if you can make money off of stuff others are already doing... well why not? On another note, I have some Clad stuff I'd love to test this on for ya. I also have some silver I could help test with too.
I just bought a new lens and would love an excuse to try it out! Let me know if you need any other testers Thad.
Edited by lukkyseven 06/28/2011 07:38 am
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Pillar of the Community
United States
3592 Posts |
Well Thad, looks like wheezydog has pretty much repeated what I had said in another conversation so I don't need to repeat. Go for it !
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Valued Member
United States
115 Posts |
I can truly appreciate how difficult this can be to get consistent results. I had some cleaned coins I wanted to try this on. Nothing valuable, but it was copper with that ugly pink color. I tried using a shampoo product for dandruff since it had a sulfate as part of its formula. Not a pure sulfur mind you but I just wanted to see if it would do anything. Anyway after a day it certainly did change! Parts of it did acquire a slightly darker tone to which was much more natural. Problem was it was very inconsistent. there were parts of the coin that had nice color but there were parts with a very defined lineation between the way it was originally and how it was toned with the shampoo. So I can imagine to create a product with consistent results is very hard. Now I don't know if it just because the shampoo had an inconsistent mix itself or whether the coin originally had some imperceptible oil or fingerprints on it that caused this result. I suppose what I need to do is "clean" the coin first with some acetone first. May try this again some time. But just with dandruff shampoo would have an effect in less than a day! end of research.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
860 Posts |
In my opinion, natural toning seldom , very seldom, occurs from a liquid medium, instead it is from gas. So an artificial tone should also be gaseous to have natural appearances. Any one who knows how to build a tiny gas chamber would be on their way.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
659 Posts |
form what I can understand, this would be a liquid that releases a gas.
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Replies: 48 / Views: 15,088 |