New at this and am hoping for some help.....

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by vliet, Sep 7, 2015.

  1. vliet

    vliet New Member

    I'm wondering if anyone has tips on how to clean silver coins? Is it wise? I've found some metal detecting ...Any feed back would be greatly appreciated.
     
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  3. jwitten

    jwitten Well-Known Member

    DON'T DO IT! NOOOO!!!!
     
  4. vliet

    vliet New Member

    OK...Ty...Have another question...So if I found a silver coin metal detecting and I want to get it graded...Do I send it as is?
     
  5. Kentucky

    Kentucky Supporter! Supporter

    Usually silver coins found metal detecting are moderately sad and it is unlikely that any would be worth slabbing. Generally they NEED to be cleaned to even see what they are. Please post some pictures and you can get advice from others here as to whether they are worth cleaning or grading. If you decide to clean, soaking in water, acetone, mild soap solution will do minimal to no damage. Please post us some pictures.
     
  6. Stephan77

    Stephan77 Well-Known Member

    I say rinse it off with distilled water, and do not apply pressure while rinsing it because the dirt could scratch the coin. Then dab it dry with a 100% cotton cloth. Then place it in a 2x2 holder and enjoy the coin as is.
     
  7. vliet

    vliet New Member

    Here it is...It's a 1921 Standing Liberty Quarter ....
     

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  8. doug5353

    doug5353 Well-Known Member

    Your question is impossible to answer until we know the denomination, date, and mintmark, and general condition. I don't know that I ever found a numismatic coin, using a White's Coinmaster IV in the 1970s.
     
  9. Kentucky

    Kentucky Supporter! Supporter

    A very nice coin, but not worth the expense of having it graded. Soak it in some water (distilled is best, but tap works good too if you rinse it with distilled) and then ask people here to grade it...I would say VG - Very Good. What does the back look like?
     
    phankins11 likes this.
  10. doug5353

    doug5353 Well-Known Member

    Fuzzy pic, looks more like a 1927. Either way, leave it alone, it looks well above average for a dug-up silver coin.
     
    Kentucky likes this.
  11. vliet

    vliet New Member

    Thanks, it is a 1921 and I know its rare. So I guess I will send it as is to get it graded.in order to sell it to a collector do they usually want to see a graded coin. Is that the norm. I know it will cost me some money.
     
  12. doug5353

    doug5353 Well-Known Member

    1921 has what Redbook calls a pedestal date, while a 1927 has a recessed date; is that what you're seeing?
     
  13. Kentucky

    Kentucky Supporter! Supporter

    Grading is not worth it for this coin.
     
    Jwt708 likes this.
  14. hotwheelsearl

    hotwheelsearl Well-Known Member

    A coin in that condition is worth significantly less than the cost (19 dollars or so) to get it graded.
     
  15. charlietig

    charlietig Well-Known Member

    I agree with others, pure waste of time and money getting that graded.
     
  16. Daniel Jones

    Daniel Jones Well-Known Member

    What you can do with this coin is "curate" it instead of clean it. Professional coin grading services will curate you coin if you tell them to, which is just a fancy term for professionally cleaning it, but without leaving any trace of cleaning. And, your 1921 quarter is worth about $350 or so in that condition. great find! I don't know why Kentucky said certifying that is a waste of money.
     
  17. green18

    green18 Unknown member Sweet on Commemorative Coins

    Welcome to the forum Vliet. That's a real nice find with the metal detector.......don't see much (if any) corrosion.....it wouldn't hurt to let that coin soak in a bath of pure acetone (hardware store 100% stuff) for a few hours. Rinse with some distilled (too many impurities in tap) water and allow to air dry on a soft towel.
     
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  18. 19Lyds

    19Lyds Member of the United States of Confusion

    Looks like a 1927 to me and if that's the case, getting it graded would be a waste of your time and your money.
     
    hotwheelsearl likes this.
  19. medoraman

    medoraman Supporter! Supporter

    I agree. I would start on another silver coin you have found metal detecting and practice. Also, I would reiterate a few points from others:

    1. Hardware store acetone, (never trust it from general stores as frequently they have other things in there).
    2. Distilled water. You can get it for free from your air conditioner.
    3. Do not rub. Dirt is just like sand paper. Rubbing a dirty coin will be just like rubbing sand paper on the coin.
     
  20. Daniel Jones

    Daniel Jones Well-Known Member

    I am surprised at all you guys here for thinking this 1921 quarter looks like a 1927! It is obviously a 1921. You can tell that by simply looking at the level date field, and the style of the date, whereas, the 1927 date field is noticeably recessed.
     
  21. medoraman

    medoraman Supporter! Supporter

    I believe its a 1927 as well sir. Look at the angle. Here is a pic of a 1921 dated coin:

    1921 SLQ.jpg

    See how the 1 is completely upright? The OP's coin is slanted, like the lower part of the seven in this quarter.

    1927 SLQ.jpg

    Given these two pics, I would guess its a 1927. Just my opinion.
     
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