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<p>[QUOTE="Kentucky, post: 2555056, member: 33176"]He is far more abrasive than the majority of posters on this forum.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000">More than the majority perhaps, but far from the worst.</span></p><p><br /></p><p>However you do see corrosion on the cheek area? The coin has some minor corrosion evident on the cheek area.... this is true, but I fail to see your point?</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000">Close, I said I saw some damage in the cheek area and in front of the nose that came from removal of the corrosion. Just pointing out, as has been pointed out many times before that really bad corrosion on a coin will cause damage to the underlying material that becomes evident when the corrosion is removed.</span></p><p><br /></p><p>It was not corrosion growing over the silvering, but deposits resulting from copper oxides leaching onto this coin from others which were in close vicinity. The corrosion in front of the nose was acting within this coin under the silvering....</p><p>read cbd 's post. <span style="color: #ff0000">Agree that the damage I pointed out was due to corrosion on the coin that was removed, however, corrosion is corrosion whether it comes from the coin or from others in it's vicinity.</span></p><p><span style="color: #ff0000">Still an excellent job of cleaning/conserving.</span>[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="Kentucky, post: 2555056, member: 33176"]He is far more abrasive than the majority of posters on this forum. [COLOR=#ff0000]More than the majority perhaps, but far from the worst.[/COLOR] However you do see corrosion on the cheek area? The coin has some minor corrosion evident on the cheek area.... this is true, but I fail to see your point? [COLOR=#ff0000]Close, I said I saw some damage in the cheek area and in front of the nose that came from removal of the corrosion. Just pointing out, as has been pointed out many times before that really bad corrosion on a coin will cause damage to the underlying material that becomes evident when the corrosion is removed.[/COLOR] It was not corrosion growing over the silvering, but deposits resulting from copper oxides leaching onto this coin from others which were in close vicinity. The corrosion in front of the nose was acting within this coin under the silvering.... read cbd 's post. [COLOR=#ff0000]Agree that the damage I pointed out was due to corrosion on the coin that was removed, however, corrosion is corrosion whether it comes from the coin or from others in it's vicinity. Still an excellent job of cleaning/conserving.[/COLOR][/QUOTE]
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