How to clean... Acetone?

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Crist Clapper, Jan 31, 2016.

  1. Crist Clapper

    Crist Clapper New Member

    I've identified 40-50 coin so far. Now I'm working on the more difficult coins. The attachment is a collection of coins that appear to have been laying on each other and caused build-up that is raised to the touch. I've also read threads here and it seems the most popular solution is Acetone. Help?

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  3. Blissskr

    Blissskr Well-Known Member

    Acetone isn't likely to help very much. They all look like they've corroded enough to have surface damage but you can try soaking them for awhile it certainly wouldn't hurt.
     
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  4. Amos 811

    Amos 811 DisMember

    spend that 92 canadian cent, and the 59 us nickle
     
  5. tpsadler

    tpsadler Numismatist

    great coins to experiment with :)
     
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  6. Kentucky

    Kentucky Supporter! Supporter

    The first thing I would try with these would be a prolonged water soak. Soak the copper coins together and the Cu-Ni together. Give it a couple of days and brush with an old toothbrush.
     
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  7. swamp yankee

    swamp yankee Well-Known Member

    Always start w/DISTILLED WATER-in a( hand held steamer if available) and then a soak in acetone afterwards,these may be damaged by corrosion which looks to be salts of some type? Best of luck!
     
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  8. ldhair

    ldhair Clean Supporter

    Water first, acetone after that. No rubbing if the coin has any value.
     
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  9. Kentucky

    Kentucky Supporter! Supporter

    Not convinced for most circulated coins...Proofs and MS- state coins yes, not circulated coins. Tap water in most areas is no more than 500 ppm dissolved solids, that translates out to 99.95% pure water. However, I might hold on the toothbrush, and just rinse/soak them first and then pat dry with a soft towel (even 0.05% adds up).
     
  10. Brett_in_Sacto

    Brett_in_Sacto Well-Known Member

    Clean coins with Coke!!! (seriously, probably a bad idea!)

    And NO, Pepsi is not ok! :)

     
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  11. Kentucky

    Kentucky Supporter! Supporter

    Coke has some phosphoric acid there, just use dilute phosphoric acid.
     
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  12. Crist Clapper

    Crist Clapper New Member

    Thanks for all the advice! I had them in WD-40... Because it was on-hand... Nothing. So... Now onto you-alls suggestions!
     
  13. Crist Clapper

    Crist Clapper New Member

    Thanks for the included information! A quick update... I did the soak-in-Coke thing. Surprisingly the Coke removed the raised-gunk. Stay tuned!
     
  14. tpsadler

    tpsadler Numismatist

    I would imagine it would remove a number of elements including the patina .. the part which most collectors like :)
     
  15. Kentucky

    Kentucky Supporter! Supporter

    Actually a patina may be desirable or undesirable, considering it is corrosion.
     
  16. tpsadler

    tpsadler Numismatist

    coke &/or pepsi = bad news
    except for those who have not found out yet :)
     
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