Should I clean pennies that I will put in albums?

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Jaylee, Jun 19, 2012.

  1. Jaylee

    Jaylee Copper Hopper

    Just looking for opinions here. Should I clean my wheat pennies that I plan on putting into albums? I would probably give them to kids/grandkids in the future so would the value be cut in half?
     
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  3. buddy16cat

    buddy16cat Well-Known Member

    In general you should not clean coins. If you must use the least abrasive method. For wheats I soak them in alcohol for a little bit then distilled water. I then gently blot them dry with a cotton cloth then let them air dry. That gets rid of the dirt without effecting the appearance of them.
     
  4. silentnviolent

    silentnviolent accumulator--selling--make an offer I can't refuse

    Thou shalt not clean thy coins!
     
  5. TheCoinGeezer

    TheCoinGeezer Senex Bombulum

    Except in a rock tumbler! ;)
     
  6. Kid_Collector

    Kid_Collector Member

    Wondering. If you are wanting good looking coins ( wheat pennies ) to pass down through the generations. Why not get good quality coins instead of old crappy ones you can find and then clean them? Wheat cents in high grades arent very exspensive, except for the key dates.
     
  7. tmoneyeagles

    tmoneyeagles Indian Buffalo Gatherer

    Cleaning can absolutely diminish a coin's value. It's a general rule in numismatics to never clean your coins.

    I agree with the post that I've quoted. It would be ideal to buy higher grades in the first place.
     
  8. roll searcher

    roll searcher coin hunter

    And if you do buy high grades, DO NOT CLEAN THEM! That will seriously hurt there value.
     
  9. camlov2

    camlov2 Member

    Do you want your grandkids to end up with coins that have more value (buy nicer coins), a little value (leave circulation coins uncleaned), or only face value (clean them)?
     
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