Looks about EF40.
They are just a little difficult to find in circulation because so many were hoarded....but nothing special.
Me too! :p
Vinegar is basically dilute acetic acid. Using it, as well as any other acid, on a coin will permanently damage the surface.
Carl, I hope you have that saved somewhere so you don't have to retype it everytime. :D
I guess I should have ordered 20 because based on the one I bought, my set is a stinker. All I was really after was the Lincolns and one of them...
It is not, it could never dissolve a coin.
One of the typical ingredients is ethyl acetate, something you don't want on your nice coins.
http://lmgtfy.com/?q=Denatonium+Benzoate
Not a proof, but still a keeper. The 1968-S is the lowest mintage Memorial cent produced.
Only one coin I'm dying for, 1936 Lincoln brilliant proof. I found one at the big, once-a-year show here but I didn't have enough money to buy it....
Completely agree. Anyhow, you should always start with deionized water before using any organic chemicals. For copper, my first choice for...
I'd happily give them $500 for it! :D
Outstanding toners! :yawn:
I bought a Jefferson's Liberty because I liked the design....and because my dealer had one he was going to melt. I stole it from him at the spot...
Awesome idea!
Some of the CDN values have actually gone down last I checked. I actually expect prices to drop with the recession. Plenty of collectors are...
Indeed. When they say it "won't leave a film" don't believe them. It might not leave a "film" you can see or feel, but it is there. There's no...
Attrition, banks and businesses, and the pockets and jars of billions of people around the world.
Pictures can lie, it's all about an eye-appeal grade it seems though.
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