This is what it says on Amazon: safe to use on gold, silver, nickel, copper, brass and bronze will not change the color of your coin Well it has been said here that it will turn copper coins blue.
To help speed up the cleaning with Acetone, you can soak a Q-tip in Acetone, then ROLL it over the surface of the coin. Don't rub, unless it is a circulated coin, and then, don't use any pressure.
Aluminium (oops, wrong English), Aluminum-Bronze is a different animal, using Aluminum in place of Tin.
ETHANOL, 2-BUTOXY PEL: 25 PPM CAS #: 111-76-2 TLV: 25 PPM POTASSIUM HYDROXIDE, LIQUID PEL: NOT ESTABLISHED CAS #: 1310-58-3 TLV: NOT ESTABLISHED SODIUM GLUCONATE PEL: NOT ESTABLISHED CAS #: 527-07-1 TLV: NOT ESTABLISHED SULFONATED SODIUM SALTS PEL: NOT ESTABLISHED CAS #: 147732-60-3 TLV: NOT ESTABLISHED INERT MATERIAL PEL: NOT ESTABLISHED CAS #: 7732-18-5 TLV: NOT ESTABLISHED https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct...530.MSDS.pdf&usg=AOvVaw0kEKpPrINEGdk02Kl0hcxI
Not dichloromethane (methylene chloride) or other halogenated solvents, please. There are warnings against using it on alloys of aluminum, magnesium or zinc. Same thing with Koinsolv, which contains on n-propyl bromide. It might not attack any given aluminum coin, but I wouldn't trust it.
And the "acid free" part is scientifically accurate. The potassium hydroxide makes it a strong base. Problem is, aluminum and zinc are attacked by strong bases just as quickly as by acids. I got my nose rubbed in this because I started running aluminum baking pans through the dishwasher. Dishwasher detergent (these days) is mostly sodium carbonate, a strong base. The pans developed pits, and one actually developed pinholes.