Looks like I would be there for years - just opening and looking at stuff. I do this all the time at the local shop. I look at all kinds for stuff - just because I like looking.
How does the Bode get around the off-gassing issue...or are all those banks of cabinets made of inert simulated-wood plastic? Steve
Here are a couple of the Lighthouse wooden boxes. As I recall, I paid about $20 each at a coin show. The list price could probably be found on the Lighthouse Webpage. Slabs do look kinda nice in the boxes. However, you can only see one side of the slab unless you pop-out the slab.
Ummm, I can answer any question in the World. Sometimes the answer is "I don't know". I'd guess that they are made of Mahogany & the coins may suffer from outgassing from various materials used in the construction. They are beautiful cabinets aren't they?
Fantastic. Must have cost a king's ransom to build that bank of cabinets. Imagine what the value of the contents is! Steve
New at toning. Is it good or bad? Have heard some of both sides. My 1960's silver has started darkening in some places but not evenly. Thanks = Rick
I need to see if I can find his contact info , its been years since this chest was made but I'm sure his information is around here somewhere . I haven't had any issues with coins toning in the case . And some of the coins have been in it since I received it.
What a lot of people don't understand is that in a great many cases, maybe even the majority of them, museums do not follow proper storage procedures. As a matter of fact many of them don't follow proper anything procedures. Take the Smithsonian for example, their idea of keeping the coins presentable for display is to wipe them down with cloths every so often. Does that give you an idea of how museums treat coins ?
For modern coins, or coins which were brilliant when purchased, these are probably a really bad way to store them, as GDJMSP mentioned (although, many leading museums have realized that is a bad way to treat coins and have been improving). However, Collect89 said that a large number of the coins were ancients. These usually have a thick patina already. Storing them in a wooden cabinet will have little to no effect after having been in the dessert or dirt or wherever for 2000 years already.