Circulated coins - yuck!

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by Acer0001, Jul 31, 2007.

  1. Acer0001

    Acer0001 New Member

    I've never done this, but the other day i went in to the bank and got $4 worth of cents to go through my album. It was fun to see what each roll contained. The rolls had clear plastic covering them so you could see the coin edges, decreasing the surprise value, but it was still fun.

    After I was done examining and sorting them, I looked at my fingers and they were black! It took some good scrubbing to get them clean again. None of the coins looked "dirty", but I guess they were. No telling where they've been, I guess.

    Acer0001
     
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  3. mark_h

    mark_h Somewhere over the rainbow

    Wait till you go through a bucket of nickels(or quarters) at a casino. Now that is bad.
     
  4. Anergetic

    Anergetic New Member

    That's why you should never put your money where your mouth is.
     
  5. clembo

    clembo A closed mind is no mind


    ....or pick your nose!
     
  6. MoneyHungry

    MoneyHungry angel in a earth suit

    The government should tax casinos because of the damage they do to circulated coins.
     
  7. Coinlover

    Coinlover The Coin Collector

    you ought to see my fingers after going through 100 buffalo nickels at the dealer booth! did you find any wheats in the rolls?
     
  8. bqcoins

    bqcoins Olympic Figure Skating Scoring System Expert

    try going through a couple of pounds of foreign, icky.
     
  9. coinnut

    coinnut Senior Member

    same with me

    well,can anybody say what causes this?
    its not just dirt from peoples fingers
    its almost metalic
    any ideas?
     
  10. Drusus

    Drusus Pecunia non olet

    I just bought a few pounds of foreign coins...they were seriously dirty.
     
  11. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator

    It's a mixture - primarily dirt from people's fingers. But there is also a lot of very fine metal from all of the coins rubbing against one another.
     
  12. Leadfoot

    Leadfoot there is no spoon

    I did the same thing with cotton gloves, and noticed a very distinctive green color, ?probably from copper's corrosion/patina consisting of copper sulfates?....Mike
     
  13. gatzdon

    gatzdon Numismatist

    I recently went through $300 in brand spanking new 2007D nickels and my fingers still turned black. Besides the dirt, it's also the metal wearing off the coins.

    Yes, searching rolls is a very dirty job, I'm thinking of submitting it as an idea to the Dirty Jobs show on Discovery, but then realize I don't want to get too many more people involved, otherwise all my good finds will suddenly dry up.
     
  14. rotobeast

    rotobeast Old Newbie

    There is a lot of oxidation from coming in contact and reacting with different metals.
    If you ever look at a machine that has an aluminum part next to a stainless steel one, you'll see what I mean.
    A black powdery substace starts to build up.
    Considering all the places our coins travel through, I'm sure they sit in bins made of various metals for lengthy periods.
    As has already been mentioned, oils from handling, changing the pH balance on the surface, doesn't help.
     
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