Recent cleans

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by Exodus_gear, Feb 24, 2021.

  1. Archeocultura

    Archeocultura Well-Known Member

    Not really recent, but a very successful clean!
    Diva Faustina in a carpentum. Large (wooden) images of the deified emperors and empresses were present at festivities and games. So this is not a funeral procession, but a memento of the greatness of the person.
    RIC 1113 III Faustina Sr 1113 cleaned and uncleaned small.jpg
     
    Alegandron, PeteB, singig and 3 others like this.
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  3. otlichnik

    otlichnik Well-Known Member

    hotwheelsearl, do you mind sharing your "forumla"? Amount, dilution, time, etc?

    I am a mechanical cleaning guy who avoids chemical, but as you note there are times/coins where there is no option.

    So far my only chemicals (other than for BD treatment) have been citric acid or acetic acid for cleaning black gunk off silver. But I do have a growing "frustration bin" of crusty AEs.....

    SC
     
  4. hotwheelsearl

    hotwheelsearl Well-Known Member

    Happy to share!

    I do not understand any of the chemistry, but in my experience, it's a rather color-coded system that works for me.

    Bronze and silver
    Green, Black, Brown, Sand = sodium hydroxide
    Blue = acetic acid
    Rust = sodium thiosulfate
    -- for silver, black horn silver is also removed by thiosulfate

    In general, rock-like mineral encrustations slough right off with hydroxide. Vinegar and thiosulfate don't do much at all for those.
    Basically, for mineral encrustations that you COULD, but DONT WANT TO mechanically clean, hydroxide speeds up the process a thousand fold.

    As for dilutions and times - I'm not very scientific. I throw some powder/crystals in a jar and leave it overnight. If it's not enough, I'll do another night.
     
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