Acetone bath

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by Seattlite86, Dec 11, 2018.

  1. Seattlite86

    Seattlite86 Outspoken Member

    I put the really bad ones in there for fun. I’m really just trying to clean up the better date coins before putting them in 2x2s and tucking them away.
     
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  3. bear32211

    bear32211 Always Learning

    Did you rub that dark one at all to see if anything came off ?
     
  4. Seattlite86

    Seattlite86 Outspoken Member

    Yes, with a q-tip. The tip turned dark but the coin looked pretty much the same. It might be too far gone. It’ll get a distilled water bath tonight. That might help.
     
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  5. Dynoking

    Dynoking Well-Known Member

    I’m doing a similar project. Like Doug has suggested long soaks in distilled water seem to be more effective than acetone. After two or three days the water will get a little cloudy and you will see some of the loosened residue floating. I gently roll a q tip that has been dipped in clean distilled water across the coins surface and the rim. Then I flush the coins and the pan with distilled water. I cover the coins with the distilled water and let them soak again. I have tried rolling the q tip daily. If I get some of the gunk off all the better. Either way the coins go back in for more soaking. I am on week two so far.
     
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  6. V. Kurt Bellman

    V. Kurt Bellman Yes, I'm blunt! Get over your "feeeeelings".

    I just got back my first "body-bagged" coin from NGC. It's a Swiss 10 Franc "fighting bulls" commemorative. It was not slabbed due to "residue", with the usual "ideal for conservation" promotional stuff. It's now in acetone. If that fails, xylene.

    It sure does look magnificent IN the acetone.
     
    Last edited: Dec 11, 2018
  7. BlackberryPie

    BlackberryPie I like pie

    As someone herw once told me. Use a rose thorn or was it a nail?! One of the two... But really, don't use either, or do since they are your coins.
     
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  8. Dynoking

    Dynoking Well-Known Member

    After reading the advice here on CT and attending the coin grading class which included dealing with problem coins at the ANA convention this past summer, I have been trying my hand at coin conservation.
    First I tried distilled water, then acetone, MS70 and Ezest on junk silver, LWC's (no MS 70 or Ezest), clad KHD and Ike dollars with great results. I moved on to junk Peace dollars purchased at estate sales with good results. and I had fantastic results with a WLH that had a bad case of verigus.
    I am far from a pro coin conservator but so far I am pleased with the results.
     
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  9. Cheech9712

    Cheech9712 Every thing is a guess

    Q tip them for sure. Like the first pic bottom middle coin. (the one with no date and dirty feather) that coin deserves a date
     
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  10. Cheech9712

    Cheech9712 Every thing is a guess

    Sounds like a plan
     
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  11. V. Kurt Bellman

    V. Kurt Bellman Yes, I'm blunt! Get over your "feeeeelings".

    I refuse to ever touch EZest. Have never used it, will never use it.
     
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  12. BigTee44

    BigTee44 Well-Known Member

    I left a Peace dollar in a jar for 2 weeks... didn't remove what I wanted but didn't do anything to the coin.

    I wouldn't be worried about soaking silver
     
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  13. Kentucky

    Kentucky Supporter! Supporter

    Collectors of ancient coins have been known to leave ancients soaking for months, even up to a year. For extended soaks like this (months +) I would use distilled water and change it periodically.
     
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  14. Seattlite86

    Seattlite86 Outspoken Member

    Yes, rose thorn. I remember hearing that some years ago.
     
  15. 1916D10C

    1916D10C Key Date Mercs are Life! 1916-D/1921-D/1921

    In regards to soaking for months or years- so the acetone does not harm the metal in any way??

    And that rose thorn idea makes me cringe...
     
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  16. Kentucky

    Kentucky Supporter! Supporter

    Acetone or water should not harm a coin in the least...as long as they are pure. Do you think you might scratch the metal with a rose thorn?:nailbiting:
     
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  17. 1916D10C

    1916D10C Key Date Mercs are Life! 1916-D/1921-D/1921

    If a cotton cloth can put hairlines on a coin, I would imagine a rose thorn could scratch the surface.
     
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  18. Mainebill

    Mainebill Bethany Danielle

    I’ve left coins in acetone for over a month. I just rinse under the faucet after and blot dry with a paper towel. I use the q tip soaked in acetone to get the crud off. Usually pvc residue. As to really getting crud off usually with verdicare on copper I use a toothpick a thornapple thorn or make my own pick out of a sliver of hardwood And I get them straight graded routinely
     
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  19. 1916D10C

    1916D10C Key Date Mercs are Life! 1916-D/1921-D/1921

    You continue to make my case stronger as to why I'm so picky about my coins being absent of hits and marks and displaying original Silver patina. Yikes.
     
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  20. Seattlite86

    Seattlite86 Outspoken Member

    I totally forgot to swap them out last night and put in distilled water. I swapped this morning. First photo is pre water pour, second photo is after. I’ll check on them tonight. Need to figure out how to get the loose gunk off without hairlines. Maybe running them under hot water?

    35D19176-7DA8-4D0D-BC9B-873337A5477D.jpeg 6ED241EF-F665-4C58-A44D-D2681A40066C.jpeg
     
  21. Ana Silverbell

    Ana Silverbell Well-Known Member

    Reading these posts makes me wonder why TPGs bother to put "cleaned" on some of their slabs. ;)
     
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