coin cleaning

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by davedawg, Jul 18, 2007.

  1. davedawg

    davedawg New Member

    I have a bunch of coins that I want to send out to get certified but a few of them have either thumb prints or other debris on them. Should I attempt to clean these off, and if so, how, or will it de-value the coin and just leave as is?
     
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. codydude815

    codydude815 Wannabe coin dealer

    NOOOOOOOOO

    NEVER EVER CLEAN A COIN!! For one, if its cleaned, it wont get slabbed, and two, it will decrease the value. If some look like corrosion or environmental damage, send them to NCS (Thats NGC's company for damaged coins) they will slab em.
     
  4. coinnut

    coinnut Senior Member

    i have heard of soaking coins in olive oil and even wd40.
    anybody know anything about this
     
  5. codydude815

    codydude815 Wannabe coin dealer

    olvie oil is mainly for ancients, and WD-40, temporalily removes corrosion, but it will come back in a year twice as bad.
     
  6. Cloudsweeper99

    Cloudsweeper99 Treasure Hunter

    Dave, don't clean them.
     
  7. DJCoinz

    DJCoinz Majored in Morganology

    Don't clean 'em. :)
     
  8. Twiggs

    Twiggs Coin Collector

    Dont clean them!

    lol
     
  9. bqcoins

    bqcoins Olympic Figure Skating Scoring System Expert

    no no no no no
     
  10. tjenkins_1983

    tjenkins_1983 Numismaniac

    Yeah, just leave them as is.
     
  11. davedawg

    davedawg New Member

    Overwhelmingly clear not to clean them, thanks. One question though, how much would a fingerprint lower the overall grade of a coin?
     
  12. vancoin

    vancoin New Member

    Take his advice
     
  13. gatzdon

    gatzdon Numismatist

    A quick rinse with Acetone followed by Distilled Water and an air dry would remove the oils from the fingerprint to prevent further damage to the coin, but if the fingerprint has changed the metal in any way already, there is nothing more that you can do.
     
  14. Just Carl

    Just Carl Numismatist

    If you still have Lead-Acid battery, open the ports and take some of the acid out. Place all your coins in a Aluminum pan with the acid. Leave for one year. :smile :whistle:
    OK now for real, don't do anything with the coins. If you have coins worth grading, NGC will usually do a little professional cleaning if possible. Do not try any things people say is OK because they are not their coins so they can tell you anything and if it doesn't work and you ruin the coins, they just say Oh well to bad, your coins, so.
    As to stuff like Olive Oils or WD-40 and other oily cleaning agents. There have been reports of people using such things and having good, decent, great or horrible results. The reason it varies is the solution used varies as well as the climatic conditions used. Note Olive Oil for example. This is a man made substance and varies from manufacturer to manufacturer. Some may have numerous contaminates that are not dangerous for some things but may effect coins. Same with WD-40. Even similar cans from the same shelf may contain slightly different ingrediants pending the manufacturing processes. In industry there are numerous differences bases on tolerances in the end product. For example even a steel beam can have as much as a fraction of an inch in size difference and still be called the same thing as specified. This is well true of substances like Olive Oil. Even the containers used for these substances could change their chemical structure.
    Summation: DO NOT CLEAN COINS.
     
  15. Bruce_B

    Bruce_B New Member

    :thumb:
     
  16. davedawg

    davedawg New Member

    thanks for all the good advice everyone....no cleaning
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page