The coin I have, couldn't take a picture of it, didn't come out good. I found this one that is similar to mine. There is some kind of white deposits. What would be the best way to remove these deposits? What do you guys think?
You never ever remove patina from a coin! Doing so devalues the coins worth. Never try clean any old gun , antique unless you are an expert or have taken it for restoration .
This particular coin has these white deposits on it. There's no real patina on it because it was used for jewelry. It wasn't polished so it still has a nice surface. I'm just trying to clean it up to make it look a little better by getting the white crud out of it. It's value is maybe $300, not that much.
May I ask how you came up with this? No disrespect intended, but that's awfully high for a Morgan repousse.
It's 5 of them made in to what seams like bracelet or part of a belt not sure.I tried to take a photo did not come out good found one with the same more or less deposits on it I think they sell for about $60 each picked it up for $80 not to bad I think
Make sure your repousse is silver, that white thing could be plaster which is indicative of casting. Take it to a jewelry shop and nicely ask them to test for metal content (not with acid, but with the testing machine). I had one of these and the coin was not an original Morgan Dollar. Try posting a picture.
It tested silver and 3 of them have the patent bar on them the white stuff could be from a old polishing it not plaster at least from what I see and the weight is right and size
the weight should not be the same, a large piece of morgan is missing and replaced by something else typically a plated metal of some type
Can you please also post a pic of the reverse? Now, you write "there were 5 of them" - can you post pics of all 5, obverse and reverse? I have a huge collection of these pop-out coins, and I would be able to answer many of your questions. And, by the way, since these are works of art, and not a "coin", per se, you can clean it, as long as you don't use anything abrasive like a whiz or Dremel tool. Would someone pay more for it with its "rusty dirty original" condition Vs. a nicely cleaned coin? Maybe, but it really doesn't matter. Personally, I don't clean my pop-outs, but I did dip a few that I felt needed it, as well as submerge a couple copper pieces that were stored in PVC flips. As an educated appraiser of these, I would not take off a single Cent because of that.
I was under the impression he was saying his coin was the same weight as a silver dollar, looking at the picture I would say no, I've seen dozens of these and none matched up, however I did see a cup and saucer made from Canadian silver nickles that did, stunning work.
Galen59 - the popped up Morgan should weigh exactly what a normal Morgan should weigh + the weight of the patent bar (if it had one). Why would you think it would not weigh the same?