Jump to content

Cleaning Coin Finds -- An Incomplete Overview (long)


Recommended Posts

  • 2 weeks later...

Clad....in my case NZ decimal cupro nickel 10, 20 and 50 cents I am ruthless with. The crusty rusted blob coins are put between a cloth and whacked with the hammer to break the crud up. From there, 2 choices. Rotary rock tumbler using malt vinegar and table salt (I dont bother sorting copper colour from silver colour so all come out pink) OR I use CLR. (Calciun, rust and lime descaler which is fairly potent acid). Coins get swirled with a wooden stick in a container and soak for 10 minutes in CLR, then a water rinse, another short soak in baking soda container then air dried. As long as the bank can recognise them they are accepted. 

I experimented with old copper pennies pushed into a potato, but the starch dried them out horribly even though they came out clean. I dont clean any coin of any value using water. I dry pick the date so I can read it. I like patina. Silver coins of no value I have experimented with the baking soda/aluminium method, lemon, citric acid, methylated spirits, vodka, the freezer method, electrolysis etc. I am still experimenting odd times on non value coins to find a safe way to get crud or dirt off.

Ocean coins soak in hydrogen peroxide and washing soda, or a mild non acidic soap and water solution. 

I read somewhere on the internet some VERY good advice worth thinking on......and roughly that was.....For every step you take or liquid you put on a coin to clean it, you CANNOT undo that step. The next step you take adds to that.....ALSO irreversible. So in short, any coins of value I will leave the cleaning to the next owner.

 

  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Clad coins I dump into a vibratory tumbler with fine walnut shell that doesn't hurt them at all.

Do you check the quality of the vodka over ice prior to dunking the coins in? :)

  • Haha 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

18 hours ago, kac said:

Clad coins I dump into a vibratory tumbler with fine walnut shell that doesn't hurt them at all.

Do you check the quality of the vodka over ice prior to dunking the coins in? 🙂

Lol...yes! .....before starting!

I have found Hagerty' Silver Foam to be brilliant to use on silver rings and coins. The badly blackened rings need a couple of repeats of the foam which at least doesnt scratch. 

To those who shine their silver coins so they blind, a little sulphur will reblacken and look more natural.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

8 hours ago, kac said:

CLR is the stuff they use to clean tubs etc right?

Photo of CLR.....great for rusty coins, rusty rings but dilute, soak for 10 minutes max, swish around, then rinse well in soapy water. A step further is to neutralize the acids with a soak in baking soda or baking powder and water. May need a repeat on very bad rusty coins. DO NOT GET IT ON YOUR SKIN in its neat form.....it will burn!!!, so be careful. I put my rusty coins in a sieve that sits nicely in a container so I dont have to touch them and stir with a wooden stick. Hope this all helps.

20200215_114909.jpg

20200215_114931.jpg

IMG_20200214_211259.jpg

IMG_20200215_123319.jpg

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

No scratch foam and so easy to use. Normal polishing of silver, even plated, will remove over time a microscopic layer. This product doesnt, and I use it on silver coins and jewellery. This tub has so far lasted me over 10 years! although Im near empty now.

20200215_114534-1.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I seen the clr in the market here will snag some. Does the silver cleaner smell like ammonia?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 2/16/2020 at 5:15 AM, kac said:

I seen the clr in the market here will snag some. Does the silver cleaner smell like ammonia?

Hi Kac, No the silver cleaner doesn't smell like ammonia. On the back of the Hagerty tub it just lists ingredients as ...."according to EC recommendation:phosphates 5-15%soap, anionic surfactants less than 5%.". Guess the rest is secret......???? It works though!

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 5 months later...

Quick update. I have a vibratory tumbler I use for some my metal finishing and for kicks I used the carbon steel shot and the tumbling soap you can find from jewerly suppliers.

https://contenti.com/910-tumbling-soap-powder

Here is a comparison of how it does with a 2 1/2 hour run time.

Note the carbon shot is non abrasive. Some youtube videos show people using stones which I assume will wear the coins down, this simply knocks the dirt off. The soap is doing much of the work.

IMG_1191.JPG

IMG_1192.JPG

IMG_1190.JPG

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...