The Latest Lesson Learned

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by kanga, Jul 12, 2009.

  1. kanga

    kanga 65 Year Collector

    The latest LESSON LEARNED:

    Forget the NGC multi-coin slabs.
    Good News: They look nice in hand.
    Bad News: Storage is a minor problem.
    Bad News: The slab has been wiped (not by me) so much that there's hairlines all over the place.

    Example: All the lines are on the slab, not the coin.

    [​IMG]

    Experience is a great teacher, but she shows no mercy in the first lesson.
     
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  3. PennyGuy

    PennyGuy US and CDN Copper

    Good information, duly noted. Anyone know of a plastic polish type process to minimize those scratches?
     
  4. kanga

    kanga 65 Year Collector

    Goodman's book says change the lighting angle.
    That's fine except I've got the light coming in from the angles I want on the coin.
    If I change the angle on the slab, then the angle on the coin changes.
    I'll have to do some testing.
     
  5. illini420

    illini420 1909 Collector

    I use Meguiar's (sp??) Plastix auto plastic polish that I got at the local auto supply store which was recommended by Mark Goodman. It's a product made for polishing scratches and haziness from headlights mostly. Works great in removing light scratches and you can even remove deep ones if you work at it enough. Just takes quite a bit of elbow grease, but a bottle of this stuff is much cheaper than a reholder fee and it'll polish hundreds of slabs.
     
  6. PennyGuy

    PennyGuy US and CDN Copper

    Thanks illini, I'm going to try that on one of my Capital Plastics holders. :smile
     
  7. d.t.menace

    d.t.menace Member

    Illini beat me to it. Another one is Novus plastic polishing kit.
     
  8. schatzy

    schatzy ~Roosie Fanatic~

    Kanga....another lesson is that the mulit-holders have less value then if they were in individual slabs. I had a few sets multi-holder but I will never do it again. I had to send them in to get put into individual slabs so I could get what money I had into them back out of them.
     
  9. kanga

    kanga 65 Year Collector

    I had my two oldest proof sets put into the multi-holders ('52 and '53).
    I just wanted to see how they would turn out.
    Considering I bought the sets back in the 70's and even with the slabbing fees (5x the fee for a single coin) I think I did okay.
    The two Franklins made it worthwhile.
    The '52 graded PF-66; the '53 graded PF-65 Cameo.
    But I think you're correct about having to crack them out to get your best money.
     
  10. schatzy

    schatzy ~Roosie Fanatic~

    Kanga....I store my multi-holders in the NGC storage box and I keep them in the plastic like when you get them from NGC. I think the multi-holders scratch a lot easier than the individual slabs.
     
  11. kanga

    kanga 65 Year Collector

    I handle them maybe twice a year.
    If I were the cause of the hairlines I would expect them to be randomly oriented.
    But since they are parallel I put the blame on NGC.
    I may try one (or more) of the products mentioned.
    As long as it doesn't affect the coins I can't do any real harm (I think).
     
  12. illini420

    illini420 1909 Collector

    just don't use too much of whatever product you try as remember, the slabs are not air/water tight... don't want the polish to get into the edge seam of the slab and cause damage long term.
     
  13. donnyb

    donnyb Member

    You can send them back to NGC to be re-slabbed for a small fee plus shipping
     
  14. kanga

    kanga 65 Year Collector

    If I did that I'd probably have the slabbed separately.
     
  15. ksparrow

    ksparrow Coin Hoarder Supporter

    Brasso is also ok for polishing slabs, smear on a thin layer, let it dry, and polish with a soft cotton cloth. Towards the end, make the polishing strokes parallel to the direction of your lighting (when you photograph the coins) which makes the very faint hairlines invisible.
     
  16. Leadfoot

    Leadfoot there is no spoon

    My advice; Get some plastic polish and polish those hairlines out.
     
  17. Andypex

    Andypex New Member

    im no expert in coins but i do alot of polishing out of scratches on my motorbikes, (metal and plastic components) and surely those hairlines should polish out easy enough. get your elbow working man :)
     
  18. billp4

    billp4 Member

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