Who here has ever used (or does so on a regular basis) the magnesium or aluminum based electrolytic tarnish removal technique? This relies on putting the tarnished silver-based metal on top of a sheet of either magnesium or aluminum (such as Al foil) in a bath of sodium bicarbonate laced warm water? The Mg or Al pulls the sulpher from the silver sulphide tarnish and leaves the underlying coin relative unscathed.
I realize this isn't for use on numi coins! Let's not have that discussion - I know that.
But for "bullion" coins, with bath treatments kept fairly brief, it does a fabulous job of cleaning up minor tarnish without damaging (under 10x mag, as best as I can tell) non-numi coins.
For those that have, does anyone beside me use it on a regular basis on non-numi coins? My use is limited to circulated 64 JFKs, which will never be collectable for numi reasons. They are fundamentally a bullion coin, with >500,0000,000 minted with that one year, and most still around.
Up to recently I was segregating my 64 JFKs into clean coin and tarnished coin and keeping the tarnished rolls separate. Recently I started using this technique on the tarnished coin and found that 90% of them came clean within a couple of minutes. Another 5% take a bit longer, and a couple of percent just don't clean well (have imperfections that this won't remove - so I just pull them and keep them separate).