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<p>[QUOTE="GDJMSP, post: 2015506, member: 112"]The idea of using a Q-tip, a toothpick, a green thorn,or anything else, is to be able to gently pick at, loosen and remove bits of material that are stubbornly sticking to a coin when soaking alone is not getting them off fast enough for you, or not getting them off at all.</p><p><br /></p><p>Now realize, this means material that is substantial enough, thick enough, big enough, however you want to word it, that it requires physical manipulation of some kind to get it off the coin.</p><p><br /></p><p>But you also have to realize that if you go picking at a coin with anything, and I don't care what it is, or even "gently rolling a Q-tip" across the coin as they say, you can and will leave hairlines, marks, and/or scratches behind on the coin. So physical manipulation is best not done at all. </p><p><br /></p><p>But most people tend to ignore that advice because they have heard about it being done or read about it being done. But just because you can do something, that doesn't mean you should. People write about things like that to present you with an alternative to taking a Brillo pad and scrubbing the coin to get it clean. </p><p><br /></p><p>So if it is harmful to the coin why do they write about it at all ? Easy answer, because they know human nature. They <u>know</u> that you are going to do something. They <u>know</u> that the dirt, grime, stains, bits of this or that, even toning, being on the coin is going to just bug you to death. They <u>know</u> that you will be absolutely convinced that there simply must be, must be, something that you can do to make this coin of yours look better than it does now. And that in almost every case you are just not going to be happy with doing what you should do, which is follow proper cleaning procedures that are not harmful to the coin. So they give you a way to make yourself feel better that will do the least amount of harm to the coin. But that doesn't mean you should do actually do it.</p><p><br /></p><p>Now as sure as I am sitting here writing this you will say that you have read or heard about people doing these things and swearing by all that is holy that there was never any damage done to the coins. Well, I have heard and read hundreds, thousands, of times where people swear they never did any damage to the coin by scrubbing or even wiping the coin with a soft cloth. I've heard people say they have used Brillo pads and steel wool and swear that did no damage to the coin either. </p><p><br /></p><p>So how can people say these things ? Simple, it's because they don't know what they are looking at. They don't know what they are seeing when they see it. But people that know coins do, they can sit with you in person and show you every hairline, every scratch, every bit damage and harm that you did to the coin by doing what you did.</p><p><br /></p><p>There is <u>one and only one</u> safe method to follow that will not harm the coins. And that is by rinsing, soaking, and/or dipping the coins and using no physical manipulation at all. And yes there are a few different things you can use, namely distilled water, acetone, xylene, and coin dip, but the basic procedure is the same with all of them in that there is no physical manipulation.[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="GDJMSP, post: 2015506, member: 112"]The idea of using a Q-tip, a toothpick, a green thorn,or anything else, is to be able to gently pick at, loosen and remove bits of material that are stubbornly sticking to a coin when soaking alone is not getting them off fast enough for you, or not getting them off at all. Now realize, this means material that is substantial enough, thick enough, big enough, however you want to word it, that it requires physical manipulation of some kind to get it off the coin. But you also have to realize that if you go picking at a coin with anything, and I don't care what it is, or even "gently rolling a Q-tip" across the coin as they say, you can and will leave hairlines, marks, and/or scratches behind on the coin. So physical manipulation is best not done at all. But most people tend to ignore that advice because they have heard about it being done or read about it being done. But just because you can do something, that doesn't mean you should. People write about things like that to present you with an alternative to taking a Brillo pad and scrubbing the coin to get it clean. So if it is harmful to the coin why do they write about it at all ? Easy answer, because they know human nature. They [U]know[/U] that you are going to do something. They [U]know[/U] that the dirt, grime, stains, bits of this or that, even toning, being on the coin is going to just bug you to death. They [U]know[/U] that you will be absolutely convinced that there simply must be, must be, something that you can do to make this coin of yours look better than it does now. And that in almost every case you are just not going to be happy with doing what you should do, which is follow proper cleaning procedures that are not harmful to the coin. So they give you a way to make yourself feel better that will do the least amount of harm to the coin. But that doesn't mean you should do actually do it. Now as sure as I am sitting here writing this you will say that you have read or heard about people doing these things and swearing by all that is holy that there was never any damage done to the coins. Well, I have heard and read hundreds, thousands, of times where people swear they never did any damage to the coin by scrubbing or even wiping the coin with a soft cloth. I've heard people say they have used Brillo pads and steel wool and swear that did no damage to the coin either. So how can people say these things ? Simple, it's because they don't know what they are looking at. They don't know what they are seeing when they see it. But people that know coins do, they can sit with you in person and show you every hairline, every scratch, every bit damage and harm that you did to the coin by doing what you did. There is [U]one and only one[/U] safe method to follow that will not harm the coins. And that is by rinsing, soaking, and/or dipping the coins and using no physical manipulation at all. And yes there are a few different things you can use, namely distilled water, acetone, xylene, and coin dip, but the basic procedure is the same with all of them in that there is no physical manipulation.[/QUOTE]
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