Would this be good for coin conservation?

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by coinman1234, Jan 4, 2015.

  1. coinman1234

    coinman1234 Not a Well-Known Member

    I found this coin metal detecting and it is very corroded as seen in photos, but the details are great. Would this be a good coin for coin conservation (such as NCS) or no. If so, would it help bring up it's value and make it a better coin to look at?

    photo (3).JPG photo (5).JPG
     
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. 19Lyds

    19Lyds Member of the United States of Confusion

    What's to be conserved?

    The corrosion will always be there since conservation can't put metal back onto the coin. Probably the best that could happen would be a soaking in olive oil which might at a little gloss but, IMO, there's nothing that can really be done for the coin.

    BTW, congrats on a great find.
     
    Kirkuleez, spirityoda and coinman1234 like this.
  4. coinman1234

    coinman1234 Not a Well-Known Member

    Thanks, That is what I was thinking, it's is impossible to remove corrosion without destroying the coin. Do you think any grading service will grade it (as a details grade)
     
  5. kaosleeroy108

    kaosleeroy108 The Mahayana Tea Shop & hobby center

    if you just want it conserved and slabbed go ahead, they might be able to put a stop on severe damage its taking but nice coin
     
  6. Clutchy

    Clutchy Well-Known Member

    Personally, I would leave it alone. Im sure alot of details will disappear if you were to have it conserved. PLUS, its a nice even corrosion, I bet it would look blotchy if you did anything to it.
     
    Last edited: Jan 4, 2015
    coinman1234 likes this.
  7. torontokuba

    torontokuba Thread Crapper & Hijacker, TP please.

    I don't know about conservation, but, it's a beautiful conversation piece.
     
  8. Seattlite86

    Seattlite86 Outspoken Member

    Gorgeous coin, even if corroded. I'm not sure there's much to do about the damage.
     
  9. Oysterk

    Oysterk Active Member

  10. Seattlite86

    Seattlite86 Outspoken Member

  11. green18

    green18 Unknown member Sweet on Commemorative Coins

  12. coinman1234

    coinman1234 Not a Well-Known Member

  13. Travlntiques

    Travlntiques Well-Known Member

    Congrats on the find! I would be pleased to pull any coin out of the earth, let alone a pretty sharp 1803 Large Cent!
    Unfortunately I don't think anything could be done to make it look any better, but that's OK, it's nice as-is!
     
  14. coinman1234

    coinman1234 Not a Well-Known Member

    The only thing I did is this, The first thing when I brought it after I found it was swabbing it carefully with a wet Q-Tip after putting it under running sink water. After that I put it in olive oil, the photo I used in this post is a photo taken a week after I left it soaking in olive oil for two weeks.

    Here is a photo of it right when I found it compared to now:
    large cent.jpg
     
    torontokuba likes this.
  15. Mainebill

    Mainebill Bethany Danielle

    They can't do anything about the pitting or corrosion. It'd grade au details corrosion or enviro damage tho but yes they'd grade it
     
  16. 19Lyds

    19Lyds Member of the United States of Confusion

    Lest anybody think other wise, corrosion is not something that can be removed as it is the actual state of the coin. Meaning, a corroded coin has already had metal removed by the very act of corrosion and corrosion can be "active" or it can be stopped. Never reversed.

    The OP's coin is in as good a state as it'll every be. Pitted and eaten up by ground salts and rust. That's corrosion and its really unfortunate but that's usually what happens to Early American Copper if not properly stored in the right environment.

    Buried with the tulips isn't the right environment to store coins.
     
  17. coinman1234

    coinman1234 Not a Well-Known Member

    Any more ideas on a grade?
    Here is my coin compared to an UNC coin, what do you think, EF, AU?

    1803.jpg
     
  18. Kirkuleez

    Kirkuleez 80 proof

    I agree with AU details. It would be difficult to go any higher with the high amount of corrosion.
     
  19. coinman1234

    coinman1234 Not a Well-Known Member

Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page