penny pretty wrote:I only clean to read the date, and very carefully.if you have a date worth selling, dealears can see a cleaned coin a mile away.
silverhedgehog wrote:I only clean the ugly abes with CLR.
atticus wrote:i've mentioned this idea of coating coins in a thin film of RemOil or similar silicon based gun oil etc. I'm still hoping someone will chime in on their thoughts.
Engineer wrote:Vinegar and salt eat the the metal...which is bad.
To get rid of the grime without etching the metal, go with the old tried and true mechanic's method of soaking greasy metal in mineral spirits (paint thinner). I've used this on a lot of old dimes that wanted to stick together or were unnaturally gunked up, and it does a great job of dissolving the gunk without affecting the patina of the coin. A parts washer in the garage would be ideal, but for small volume people a capped mason jar full of mineral spirits will work well indoors. If the gunk is especially thick and the coin is worth the effort, putting the jar in a 150F oven for a few hours will help even more.
tinhorn wrote:silverhedgehog wrote:I only clean the ugly abes with CLR.
I have a bottle of CLR but it says not to use it on copper or brass. Any idea why?atticus wrote:i've mentioned this idea of coating coins in a thin film of RemOil or similar silicon based gun oil etc. I'm still hoping someone will chime in on their thoughts.
Rodebaugh wrote:+
=
Rosco wrote:
BullXXX
Return to Copper Penny Bullion Investing
Users browsing this forum: Silver4face and 0 guests