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Replies: 20 / Views: 4,205 |
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Valued Member
United States
284 Posts |
There. I said it! Whew! I feel better now...  The coins I know I'm keeping get cleaned with acetone. I pour the acetome into a small petri dish and put the coin(s) in it. The coin sits there for a bit and then I take it out with my gloved hand and gently swab it down with a q-tip. The amount of oil, gunk, and dirt that comes off is amazing. Ok, ok... there's probably some metal coming off and my MS-67 turns into a MS-65. Whatever. The coin is staying with me so I really don't care. Otherwise, the coin goes into the 2x2 flip and four staples later it is securely stored. -- Boris
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1150 Posts |
In my opinion, once you clean them they are no longer 'mint-state.'
But hey, they are your coins...so whatever floats your boat.
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
10034 Posts |
I was told by a local collector that the product MS70 will clean silver with no harm - it only removes any oil/dirt. Is this the general consensus? I have a beautiful 1950 S Franklin half with some sort of black gunk that hides a lot of the luster around the edges of the coin. I would like to find a way to get rid of the black gunk. Do people use acetone as a less expensive alternative to MS70? No, I a not considering using acetone - just wondering.
How much squash could a Sasquatch squash if a Sasquatch would squash squash? Download and read: Grading the graders Costly TPG ineptitude and No FG Kennedy halveshttps://ln5.sync.com/dl/7ca91bdd0/w...i3b-rbj9fir2
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Pillar of the Community
United States
3592 Posts |
All of my red cents found while roll hunting are given an acetone rinse.
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Valued Member
United States
79 Posts |
If there is a bit of gunk around lettering or whatever, I usually soak it in olive oil for about 30 minutes, and gently use a toothpick to prod it out. Once I get the gunk off, I gently rinse the oil off with acetone.
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
20753 Posts |
If those are your coins, what you do with them is just up to you. How you store them, show them, clean them, etc. really is up to you since they are yours. If your considering ever selling such coins, could make a world of difference though. For example you buy a coin for $100 and clean away at it. Now you try to sell it and get about $30. Your choice. A long time ago many, many people cleaned any coins they were putting in a collection. No one thought anything about that then. Many people used to buy old furnature, sand it all down and repaint those. Now on the Antique Road Show they find a $100,000 chair is now worth $100. Slight exageration maybe but today it is considered a great loss to the world to ruin or distroy remanents of the past. Yet if they are yours, it's up to you.
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Valued Member
United States
230 Posts |
Occasionally I will use a little dish soap and water on an especially dirty coin. Is "washing" a coin the same as "cleaning" a coin? Does a gentle wash do any harm to either the coin or the value?
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
12437 Posts |
Wet non-contact methods are safest, i.e. swishing and rinsing with water or acetone. If you absolutely have to touch the coin with something, make sure you thoroughly rinse with distilled water first to remove any grit and dirt and then only touch a wet object(q-tip, toothpick, rose thorn) to a wet coin. After you are done, thoroughly rinse with water to remove loosened debris and then acetone to remove any traces of water.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
539 Posts |
I have used MS70. I've not used it on silver (as I own so little of it anyway). I have used it on really common inexpensive coins to get the dirt off. I tried it once on an aluminum coin. Oh, what a disaster that was. The thing started sizzling. it was quite fascinating actually. the coin after was potted and really in bad shape. It was an inexpensive experiment gone bad! something just carl mentioned about getting smaller dollars for cleaned coins. You know that may be true if the buyer is a seasoned collector but I tell you there are a lot of cleaned coins going for plenty of dollars on ebay to someone who obviously has a hole to fill! the cleaning does not seem to detract from getting a lot of dollars for it, relative to krause catalog (and I do know they can be way off).
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Pillar of the Community
United States
3234 Posts |
Same here! But, I don't worry about just taking off a little bit of metal. Hell, they're meant to be shiny, right?!?! 
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Pillar of the Community
United States
721 Posts |
I really don't think that a distilled water or an acetone rinse is "cleaning" your coins. Mitchhailey, you seem concerned about this. Don't the professional grading services use acetone as well?
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
10284 Posts |
I use acetone myself on some coins, then I use distilled water and a hairdryer. I don't know for sure but I don't think acetone even evaporated should remain on the surface of the coin. I wouldn't consider this interpretation of cleaning as harmful to the coins. I think the harm comes from harsh chemical that actually react to metal which I don't think acetone does any and harm comes from friction using something to rub off any oxidation, dirt, grease or other residue from the surface of the coin. Thus, my second bath in the water for me. Well not for me, for the coins.
Edited by TNG 05/06/2011 4:07 pm
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Valued Member
United States
370 Posts |
I use acetone and distilled water on the ones I'm putting into my 7113. It's amazing how dirty they can be even when they look clean.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
3345 Posts |
I use vinegar to only clean coins with gunk. But say for example, I I had a Three Cent Silver with junk on it, I probably would leave it alone. Vinegar is cheap and gives the coin an unjunky appearance, but you can obviously tell if they have been "soaked" as I like to call it. Even so, every coin I put into a case I write "soaked" on if I have done so.
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
20753 Posts |
Quote:something just carl mentioned about getting smaller dollars for cleaned coins. You know that may be true if the buyer is a seasoned collector but I tell you there are a lot of cleaned coins going for plenty of dollars on ebay to someone who obviously has a hole to fill! the cleaning does not seem to detract from getting a lot of dollars for it, relative to krause catalog (and I do know they can be way off). Unfortuately your absolutely correct. People that just don't know buy cleaned coins all the time. People buy cars with all sorts of problems too and find out the hard way. People take medicines that are supposed to cure Cancer and sometimes die from Cancer. Regardless or the situation, again, your right. However, that is usually for only average coins. Once they get into a little more on the expensive side, most look into that cleaning stuff. And again your right and many get taken by pretty, cleaned, shinny coins. They are all learning but you just can't educate the entire world. Quote: Occasionally I will use a little dish soap and water on an especially dirty coin. Is "washing" a coin the same as "cleaning" a coin? Does a gentle wash do any harm to either the coin or the value? Just one of the typical things people shouldn't use on coins. If you look up cleaning coins on this forums Search tab, you'ld probable run into a lot of reasons not to do that. For one thing there are numersous different types of dish soaps and some will actually discolor a coin horribly. And as to water. There is as many differences in water as in air. If your using tap water, it could contain almost anything possible to be in water. Chlorine, Flourine, Iron Salts, Sodium Salts and no one really knows what is in your piping system. Spend a dollar and get some distilled water.
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Valued Member
 United States
284 Posts |
I always check my current batch of acetone to see if it has any water content. Pour one tablespoon into the petri dish. It should all evaporate into nothing and the dish should be dry. I have had some acetone leave a drop or two of water behind.
-- Boris
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Replies: 20 / Views: 4,205 |