68Camaro wrote:The only 90% that I clean is 64 halves, and the only method I use for that is the electrolytic method which is non abrasive and leaves them with the same surface finish (scratches or not) as the surface inherently has. The result is very appealing and for this particular coin enhances rather than detracts from value, at least for me. Otherwise I leave 90% as-is but prefer cleaner coin than badly tarnished, all other things being equal. I do NOT like mechanically / abrasively cleaned coin.
wheeler_dealer wrote:IMO there are two types of collector. Those who are building a collection of quality or numismatic and those stacking ounces. Whether for barter or wealth preservation the latter should stack quantity based on best price. Cleaned coins cheap are always welcome in my pile.
CLINT-THE-GREAT wrote:But for Stackers/Hoarders, does a cleaned run of the milll 90% coin make it less appealing or worth less? It shouldn't bring down it's Silver value should it?
Treetop wrote:One thing I will say is I wouldnt clean worn coins to well. They end up looking horrible imo. The worn areas becoming very shiny. This was more pronounced with liberty halves in my experience.
SilverDragon72 wrote:This was a good question! ... The technique I have seen the most of is using baking soda, hot water and aluminum foil. It seems to do the trick, eliminating most surface tarnish, and yet not hurting the coin at all.
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CLINT-THE-GREAT wrote:SilverDragon72 wrote:This was a good question! ... The technique I have seen the most of is using baking soda, hot water and aluminum foil. It seems to do the trick, eliminating most surface tarnish, and yet not hurting the coin at all.
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What is this baking soda/h2o/aluminum foil concoction you speak of? Is it safe? What is the up/downsides to using it? Will it still be seen as a "Cleaned" coin?
-The Great
Thogey wrote:Why go through the hassle?
Is there a premiun on cleaned junk silver? Unless you trying to misrepresent the coins, I don't see the point.
scyther wrote:Thogey wrote:Why go through the hassle?
Is there a premiun on cleaned junk silver? Unless you trying to misrepresent the coins, I don't see the point.
Some of us have no lives and spend an inordinate amount of time looking through our silver. It's more fun when it's shiny (and doesn't smell bad).
CLINT-THE-GREAT wrote:SilverDragon72 wrote:This was a good question! ... The technique I have seen the most of is using baking soda, hot water and aluminum foil. It seems to do the trick, eliminating most surface tarnish, and yet not hurting the coin at all.
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What is this baking soda/h2o/aluminum foil concoction you speak of? Is it safe? What is the up/downsides to using it? Will it still be seen as a "Cleaned" coin?
-The Great
68Camaro wrote:Incorrect - it doesn't "polish" anything. It simply converts silver sulfide to hydrogen sulfide gas and loose silver which wipes off. It leaves the fundamental silver metal untouched, doesn't change the underlying surface at all.
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