Not seeing results from acetone

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Hiddendragon, Dec 24, 2020.

  1. Hiddendragon

    Hiddendragon World coin collector

    After seeing so many threads here about acetone I decided to try it. I've tried it on about 20 different coins, with all different kinds of problems. I understand that acetone is supposed to work on organic things, but since I don't know exactly what is on these coins, I just picked ones that I thought had a decent chance of being organic. But I haven't seen any noticeable results on any of them. So I'm not really sure what's so great about acetone and what it's supposed to accomplish. I would think at least some of these coins would have something organic on them, but they look the same as ever. I left some in for about a day, and some for about three days. So is there a secret I'm missing, or how do I know what kind of coins this works on?
     
    serafino likes this.
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  3. SensibleSal66

    SensibleSal66 U.S Casual Collector / Error Collector

    Can you provide results ? What are you trying to remove ?
     
  4. Hiddendragon

    Hiddendragon World coin collector

    As I said I tried a bunch of coins with unknown substances. I don't have pics.
     
  5. AmishJedi

    AmishJedi Well-Known Member

    I only use Acetone, personally, for silver/proof coins that have PVC residue (green slime). If a coin is a clean, uncirculated, coin without any toning, it can be dipped into the Acetone to remove the PVC from its surface.

    If the coin is toned, or circulated and has a nice patina on it, the Acetone will clean it off and it won't look as nice so using the cotton swab method would be safer to implement. Do so at your own risk, obviously.
     
    spirityoda likes this.
  6. serafino

    serafino Well-Known Member

    I've used lots of Acetone on silver coins, some of them 300+ years old and I have never see any toning removed by soaking them.
     
    AmishJedi likes this.
  7. AmishJedi

    AmishJedi Well-Known Member

    Nor have I...was referring to copper/bronze patina - sorry for the confusion.

    Cheers.
     
    serafino likes this.
  8. serafino

    serafino Well-Known Member

    No worries. Have you used Xylene on copper/bronze coins ?
     
    AmishJedi likes this.
  9. AmishJedi

    AmishJedi Well-Known Member

    I have not - I'm willing to give it a try - I have some copper rounds that have seen better days!

    Thanks!
     
    serafino likes this.
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