Thogey wrote:+1
I have more than one of the hard plastic ones that is petrified and the coins are trapped. It has to be broken to remove them.
I have a roll of BU 62 dimes in one of these and I don't think they can be removed without damaging them...Boiling water?
It's actually a subject for a new thread. How do I safely remove coins from a petrified tube?
Engineer wrote:Thogey wrote:+1
I have more than one of the hard plastic ones that is petrified and the coins are trapped. It has to be broken to remove them.
I have a roll of BU 62 dimes in one of these and I don't think they can be removed without damaging them...Boiling water?
It's actually a subject for a new thread. How do I safely remove coins from a petrified tube?
Boiling water won't get hot enough, but oil would work. You'll need somewhere between 275-325F to soften the lid.
Personally, I'd just grab a heat gun and some gloves. If you get melted plastic stuck to the coins, lacquer thinner will dissolve the acrylic.
Thogey wrote:Engineer wrote:Thogey wrote:+1
I have more than one of the hard plastic ones that is petrified and the coins are trapped. It has to be broken to remove them.
I have a roll of BU 62 dimes in one of these and I don't think they can be removed without damaging them...Boiling water?
It's actually a subject for a new thread. How do I safely remove coins from a petrified tube?
Boiling water won't get hot enough, but oil would work. You'll need somewhere between 275-325F to soften the lid.
Personally, I'd just grab a heat gun and some gloves. If you get melted plastic stuck to the coins, lacquer thinner will dissolve the acrylic.
I really don't se this process happening. Maybe just drop the roll in acetone?
Engineer wrote:Thogey wrote:+1
I have more than one of the hard plastic ones that is petrified and the coins are trapped. It has to be broken to remove them.
I have a roll of BU 62 dimes in one of these and I don't think they can be removed without damaging them...Boiling water?
It's actually a subject for a new thread. How do I safely remove coins from a petrified tube?
Boiling water won't get hot enough, but oil would work. You'll need somewhere between 275-325F to soften the lid.
Personally, I'd just grab a heat gun and some gloves. If you get melted plastic stuck to the coins, lacquer thinner will dissolve the acrylic.
johnbrickner wrote:Same as above, coinsafe. Anyone know a member that sells?
Thogey wrote:+1
I have more than one of the hard plastic ones that is petrified and the coins are trapped. It has to be broken to remove them.
I have a roll of BU 62 dimes in one of these and I don't think they can be removed without damaging them...Boiling water?
It's actually a subject for a new thread. How do I safely remove coins from a petrified tube?
Thogey wrote:I don't know how it happened. The caps come off but the coins are stuck and the plastic is yellow.
I really don't want to use chemicals or strike them with a hammer.
Avoid the hard plastic ones for long term storage.
Thogey wrote:I don't know how it happened. The caps come off but the coins are stuck and the plastic is yellow.
I really don't want to use chemicals or strike them with a hammer.
Avoid the hard plastic ones for long term storage.
Engineer wrote:Thogey wrote:I don't know how it happened. The caps come off but the coins are stuck and the plastic is yellow.
I really don't want to use chemicals or strike them with a hammer.
Avoid the hard plastic ones for long term storage.
Another idea: thermal shock
Score the tube up and down to create cleavage planes, then change the temperature really fast. Ice water to boiling water, or vice-versa.
silverflake wrote:Best coin tubes? Full coin tubes! Definitely the best. Beats empty ones any day.
Keep stacking! Pats rule!
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