Residue on Franklin Half

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by Sean5150, Oct 24, 2015.

  1. Sean5150

    Sean5150 Well-Known Member

    I have this Franklin half that looks real nice underneath this coating. I'm guessing this is mint detergent residue? Does this add or take away from the coin? If it takes away, is there any way to remove it? occasionally I think it looks cool, like a Pollack painting, but I don't know what coin aficionados preference is when it comes to this. FullSizeRender 17.jpg IMG_2294.JPG
     
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  3. Cascade

    Cascade CAC Grader, Founding Member

    Yikes, if it's organic like tape residue or something then soak it in acetone. If it's haze toning there is only one thing you can do but it's "dangerous". You can get a jewelry silver dip and dilute it 50/50 with distilled water then dip the coin super-quick style for only 2-3 seconds max. There is a very fine line doing this as to weather it will work and ckear up the haze or cause a details coin to emerge
     
  4. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator

    It looks to be ordinary toning, nothing more. And from what I can see the coin is not so nice, it has several light scratches/hairlines on both the obv and rev. And may well look even worse if that toning were removed.
     
    tommyc03 likes this.
  5. tommyc03

    tommyc03 Senior Member

    Yikes is right! I don't think, whatever you do to clean up that mess, that it's going to be worth more than melt value. Common date, clean it and unload it for a nicer coin.
     
    Daniel Jones and Markus1959 like this.
  6. Markus1959

    Markus1959 Well-Known Member

    Looks like a proof that the OGP celluloid got it!
     
    tommyc03 likes this.
  7. eddiespin

    eddiespin Fast Eddie

    Yeah, looks "proofy."
     
  8. Markus1959

    Markus1959 Well-Known Member

    Yeah - buff the luster right of of that coin and sell it to some uninformed collector on FleaBay.
     
  9. olero

    olero Active Member

    I am with Cascade. I think I would try the acetone 1st it that didn't work I would do the dip. This coin isn't like the hope diamond. The dip may make it worst.
     
  10. olero

    olero Active Member

    And sock it to some beginner. Would that be the right thing to do?
    Check my Signature.
     
  11. Sean5150

    Sean5150 Well-Known Member

    The coin is from an original roll. It's not an MS67, but it looks good. Most of those "hairlines" that you see is the residue/toning. So I guess that means you don't like it.
     
  12. Sean5150

    Sean5150 Well-Known Member

    Ok, got it. I'll put it on eBay for five dollars, thanks for the advice.
     
  13. Sean5150

    Sean5150 Well-Known Member

    It's a business strike that looks "proofy". I thought it looked nice, but I guess I will get my acetylene torch and melt it down.
     
  14. olero

    olero Active Member

    edited
     
    Last edited by a moderator: Oct 25, 2015
  15. Sean5150

    Sean5150 Well-Known Member

    Yeah, screw those suckers. I think I'm gonna get my Dremel out and turn it into a "hobo half"
     
  16. Sean5150

    Sean5150 Well-Known Member

    edited
     
    Last edited by a moderator: Oct 25, 2015
  17. olero

    olero Active Member

    How do we do a PM on this board?

    This would be a good coin to experiment on.
     
  18. Cascade

    Cascade CAC Grader, Founding Member

    Try the 50/50 dip method before you melt it. It's a perfect practice piece as, like I said, it's a very tricky yet quick process that you may want to do on a better coin down the road. Just my 2 cents
     
    tommyc03 likes this.
  19. Sean5150

    Sean5150 Well-Known Member

    Which dip?
     
  20. Daniel Jones

    Daniel Jones Well-Known Member

    I was going to say the same thing, and I have also seen this cloudy looking residue on some of my proof coins, but that is because I improperly dipped them my own self. Ha, ha! Sorry.
     
  21. olero

    olero Active Member

    I would try the acetone thing 1st then maybe the dip last. If that screws it up at least it is still worth melt.
     
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