I didn't know one could take cleaning this far....

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by johnny54321, Dec 6, 2008.

  1. johnny54321

    johnny54321 aspiring numismatist

  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. mark_h

    mark_h Somewhere over the rainbow

    Well - like you said he is honest. Not sure that is nic-a-date - it seems to me it ate into the coins worse that this. Guess it could be - just never used it.
     
  4. 900fine

    900fine doggone it people like me

    WOW. That's pretty harsh.

    I just got done with the big coin show in Houston. Some of the biggest, hottest auction bid wars were for Buffalo nickels.

    But not these e-bay types. These were PR68s... $20,000 and up ! One went for $63,250. THAT was something to watch.

    Apparently the buyers were convinced there were no nickel-dissolving chemicals at work on those little sweethearts.
     
  5. bqcoins

    bqcoins Olympic Figure Skating Scoring System Expert

    All it takes is some vinegar, a closed container and about a week of time. I do that occasionally with no date mint marked nickels that I buy from my dealer at .20 a piece, then sell back at a small premium if they turn out to be better date coins. he knows they're restored and the customers he sells them to know they're restored, but some would rather have a type 2 13-S for $20-30 that looks as good as good as the one on that website, than a solid G-4 contraption for $250.
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page