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Ivory soap?
I was at my favorite coin shop today and was watching the dealer preparing a couple of coins to be dipped, so I showed interest in knowing his process. He would use jewel luster on mint silver by placing the coin in the container and turning the container upside down and right side up for about ten seconds, than he would rinse the coin with faucet water and told me that the key to protecting the coin is to wash it than with an Ivory soap bar, rinsing with faucet water, than pat drying with a paper towel... I inquired if a coin put through this process would still pass through the tpg's fine even with the soap treatment and he said he has never had a problem and that it protects the coin? Any thoughts on all this?
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krispy
OMG. Steer clear of his inventory. period.
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I would say that the coin did look blast white BU after the process.. LOL
The thing that gets me here is that this isn't some hole in the wall, nowhere store. This is an older coin collector, that has a large inventory, attends coin shows and meeting, makes deals with many other dealers as well as having a decent clientèle. He also knows a lot about coins and it is obvious to me that he has been collecting coins since well before I was born -
Coin Hoarder
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Senior Member
 Originally Posted by dctjr80 I would say that the coin did look blast white BU after the process.. LOL
The thing that gets me here is that this isn't some hole in the wall, nowhere store. This is an older coin collector, that has a large inventory, attends coin shows and meeting, makes deals with many other dealers as well as having a decent clientèle. He also knows a lot about coins and it is obvious to me that he has been collecting coins since well before I was born  When I first learned about coins from a collector (1967), he instructed me on cleaning them--
"Do not use a pencil-tip eraser to clean your coins-- Instead use a stand-alone eraser, because the metal on the pencil-tip eraser can scratch the coin".
Of course, after a few attempts at shining up common pennies in this way, I came to the conclusion that it was better to leave the coins "unerased".
Last edited by Collector1966; 11-27-2010 at 02:19 AM.
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Coin Hoarder
good advice ,,,if using an eraser !
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Junior Member
I'm no chemist but I know that soap is a surfactant: it lowers the surface tension of water, enabling it to carry away more impurities from the surface of something. I'm guessing this dealer is using it for this reason and is choosing Ivory because he believes it's relatively pure.
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Senior Errer Collecktor
http://www.straightdope.com/columns/...e-other-56-100
Ivory seems to be 99.44% fatty acids and alkali ( normal for soap), and you can read the article for the remaining .56%. If all rinsed off, I can't see it doing any more damage than the acid dip Jewel luster that preceded it. I would wash with Ivory, but not with Jewel luster -
Numismatist
 Originally Posted by dctjr80 I was at my favorite coin shop today and was watching the dealer preparing a couple of coins to be dipped, so I showed interest in knowing his process. He would use jewel luster on mint silver by placing the coin in the container and turning the container upside down and right side up for about ten seconds, than he would rinse the coin with faucet water and told me that the key to protecting the coin is to wash it than with an Ivory soap bar, rinsing with faucet water, than pat drying with a paper towel... I inquired if a coin put through this process would still pass through the tpg's fine even with the soap treatment and he said he has never had a problem and that it protects the coin? Any thoughts on all this? 10 seconds in Jewel Luster would ruin any unc coin and completely remove any luster the coin had. Soap ? Soap is a no-no on any coin.
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Maybe it was 4-6 seconds, I didn't stop watch it 
He put it in, sealed the lid, and turned it upside down to right side up about 3 times than took it out and rinsed the coin the the sink, than applying the soap to his hands and giving the coin a rub down in his soapy hands, than a final good rinse of the coin and hands, than he pat dried the coin with a paper towel. The coin is a Morgan and it looked blast white when finished, with full cartwheel effect.
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He also explained that a mint state coin can not be dipped more than twice, and that dipping would only help mint state or close to mint state coins. others it would flat out ruin.
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Defender of Old Coinage
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 Originally Posted by fretboard Wow! Well now you don't want to buy any of his silver coins! Dipping MS coins!! ouch!!   I have already stated that I have no interest in purchasing these coins, as the only coins that he would wish to dip to improve the return grade or value of are U.S. coins, and my focus on collecting is Foreign coins.
I am just curious if it is true that this treatment aforementioned is safe for coins if done correctly and if such coins would still be considered undamaged/collectible/TP-Gradable? and if this treatment would truly be in the best interest of preserving coins?
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I am interested because I have many coins with plenty of luster, but hideous toning. I also have coins with slight soil or dirt build up that I wish to know if they may be saved and deemed collectible by some method. Another example is a French 1 Franc that I have from 1866 that is in AU condition, but somehow in all of its time it has become completely black. The details are very well preserved and intact and it is a wonderful coin... but will the black destroy or break it down in the future, can it be conserved? is it even gradable as is, or can it be conserved in such away that it would be gradable? Questions like this.
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Here is the Franc
Here is the Franc I mentioned.
Should it be conserved in some way so that it may last longer. Or would it be best to place in an AirTite and that would be enough to preserve it as is?
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