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 Cleaning Copper Pennies Video.
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Ardent Listener
Administrator


USA
4841 Posts

Posted - 06/20/2009 :  20:18:03  Show Profile Send Ardent Listener a Private Message

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All posts either by the members, moderators, and the administration of http://realcent.forumco.com are for your edification and amusement only. It is not the intent of realcent.forumco.com or its host to provide investment, medical, matrimonial, legal, security or tax advice and nothing posted here should be considered to be so. All rights reserved.


Think positive.

dakota1955
1000+ Penny Miser Member



2212 Posts

Posted - 06/20/2009 :  20:53:57  Show Profile  Send dakota1955 a Yahoo! Message Send dakota1955 a Private Message
I wonder how long it would take to do all the copper pennies that we as members have on this board?
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Ardent Listener
Administrator



USA
4841 Posts

Posted - 06/20/2009 :  21:20:50  Show Profile Send Ardent Listener a Private Message
quote:
Originally posted by dakota1955

I wonder how long it would take to do all the copper pennies that we as members have on this board?



Not long if we could get a tanker truck of vinegar mixed into an Olympic size swimming pool of salt water.

Realcent.forumco.com disclosure. Please read.
All posts either by the members, moderators, and the administration of http://realcent.forumco.com are for your edification and amusement only. It is not the intent of realcent.forumco.com or its host to provide investment, medical, matrimonial, legal, security or tax advice and nothing posted here should be considered to be so. All rights reserved.


Think positive.
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n/a
deleted



13 Posts

Posted - 06/21/2009 :  10:00:28  Show Profile Send n/a a Private Message
My father-in-law owns a machine shop that makes small screws and parts for guns.. he's got an industrial parts polisher that i've been dying to try out, too..
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brian0918
Penny Collector Member



USA
315 Posts

Posted - 06/21/2009 :  10:24:07  Show Profile  Send brian0918 an AOL message Send brian0918 a Private Message
If you're going to do this, do NOT do it to any coins that have collectible value. Collectors prefer to have the aged patina left intact on the penny. If there is gunk on the penny, you can lightly wash it with soap and water, but be careful not to scratch it.

"The man who speaks to you of sacrifice, speaks of slaves and masters. And intends to be the master." -- Ayn Rand

Searched: $2230 Nickels; Liberty: 1; Buffalo: 4; War: 20; 2009: 2; 2010D: 8
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n/a
deleted



18 Posts

Posted - 06/22/2009 :  17:54:13  Show Profile Send n/a a Private Message
I'm new to this and couldn't clean all of mine. I hate to think what it would take to clean some of the stashes out there. I could do my wheats but that's about it.
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myfundsarelow
Penny Collector Member



USA
388 Posts

Posted - 06/22/2009 :  23:31:45  Show Profile Send myfundsarelow a Private Message
thank you Ardent listener for posting the information on cleaning copper cents, one can always gain good info on this forum PEACE!!
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brian0918
Penny Collector Member



USA
315 Posts

Posted - 06/22/2009 :  23:35:35  Show Profile  Send brian0918 an AOL message Send brian0918 a Private Message
Do NOT clean wheats this way!!! You won't get as much for them if the patina is destroyed.

"The man who speaks to you of sacrifice, speaks of slaves and masters. And intends to be the master." -- Ayn Rand

Searched: $2230 Nickels; Liberty: 1; Buffalo: 4; War: 20; 2009: 2; 2010D: 8
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daviscfad
1000+ Penny Miser Member



USA
1664 Posts

Posted - 06/22/2009 :  23:38:53  Show Profile Send daviscfad a Private Message
send all your wheats to me. I will make a nice place for them!

Inquiring minds want to know
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Silver Surfer
Penny Pincher Member



USA
148 Posts

Posted - 06/23/2009 :  00:18:19  Show Profile Send Silver Surfer a Private Message
I had an experience soaking a few cents in vinegar/salt/water for several minutes, just out of curiosity. The result was they turned a weird reddish/pinkish color. Buffed them and it helped some but ultimately didn't get the result I wanted so I threw them in with the ugly Abes. This method will clean the cents but don't expect to get a bright, shiny, natural looking penny once the patina is damaged. It will look like a cleaned coin (dull and unnatural appearance). I certainly will not attempt this again and have since joined the ranks of the anti-cleaning coin crowd. Learned my lesson.

I've read some good things about a product by the name of Verdi-Gone. Removes the green corrosion without destroying the patina. Haven't tried it though.

"Of all tyrannies, a tyranny exercised for the good of it's victims may be the most oppressive. It may be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busy-bodies. The robber baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end, for they do so with the approval of their own conscience." - C.S. Lewis
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brian0918
Penny Collector Member



USA
315 Posts

Posted - 06/23/2009 :  21:50:27  Show Profile  Send brian0918 an AOL message Send brian0918 a Private Message
Again, people, I cannot stress this enough - DO NOT clean wheats, Indian Heads, or anything old, AU or higher, rare, error variety, etc. You will completely destroy the value!

"The man who speaks to you of sacrifice, speaks of slaves and masters. And intends to be the master." -- Ayn Rand

Searched: $2230 Nickels; Liberty: 1; Buffalo: 4; War: 20; 2009: 2; 2010D: 8
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Ardent Listener
Administrator



USA
4841 Posts

Posted - 06/23/2009 :  22:02:49  Show Profile Send Ardent Listener a Private Message
I like plain old ketchup for cleaning my copper jewlery. Non-toxic and not too expensive if you use the cheap stuff.

Realcent.forumco.com disclosure. Please read.
All posts either by the members, moderators, and the administration of http://realcent.forumco.com are for your edification and amusement only. It is not the intent of realcent.forumco.com or its host to provide investment, medical, matrimonial, legal, security or tax advice and nothing posted here should be considered to be so. All rights reserved.


Think positive.
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Publius
New Member



USA
20 Posts

Posted - 06/24/2009 :  00:38:26  Show Profile Send Publius a Private Message
quote:
Originally posted by brian0918

Again, people, I cannot stress this enough - DO NOT clean wheats, Indian Heads, or anything old, AU or higher, rare, error variety, etc. You will completely destroy the value!



I know, I cringed when I watched the video. Yikes!
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n/a
deleted



18 Posts

Posted - 06/24/2009 :  00:51:49  Show Profile Send n/a a Private Message
a drop of gun oil seems to make them nice
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JobIII
1000+ Penny Miser Member



USA
1507 Posts

Posted - 07/30/2009 :  11:24:42  Show Profile Send JobIII a Private Message
Why would cleaning a DDO hurt the value of the coin? I'm new to rating coins and assessing the value of coins.

Also does anyone know if this process has any down side for a general bullion collection of LCM's? I'm trying to make my bullion collection look nice, and for the record there are no special coins to be found or that i'll try to find here.

Selling Copper cents. $0 FV available at 1.4xFV. Also interested in trading for wheat pennies and other coins Please pm me for requests or inquiries.



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beerdoodle
Penny Sorter Member



USA
28 Posts

Posted - 07/30/2009 :  12:56:55  Show Profile Send beerdoodle a Private Message
When I used to metal detect (constantly) I used the ole reliable rock tumbler to clean dug coins. Pea sized aquarium gravel and some cream of tarter sauce made them very presentable. But I would never try to improve a coin I found CRH. A dude on another forum I frequent just dug a 1909s vdb. He made it very presentable for a dug "wheatie".

I am really getting good at barely getting by
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Ant
Penny Hoarding Member



USA
894 Posts

Posted - 07/30/2009 :  13:03:16  Show Profile Send Ant a Private Message
quote:
Originally posted by JobIII

Why would cleaning a DDO hurt the value of the coin? I'm new to rating coins and assessing the value of coins.

Generally speaking, a cleaned coin loses a great deal of its numismatic value. Even experienced collectors shy away from cleaning a coin lightly. As mentioned above, soaking in water and a mild soap is okay, but it's easy to scratch a coin, even with a soft cloth.

It's easy to tell a cleaned coin from one that is BU/AU. Cleaned copper coins are "pink" in hue. A cleaned coin also lacks patina. Evidence of cleaning can be visible years after a coin is cleaned -- think of how many auction/sale listings note an "old cleaning".

quote:
Originally posted by JobIII

Also does anyone know if this process has any down side for a general bullion collection of LCM's? I'm trying to make my bullion collection look nice, and for the record there are no special coins to be found or that i'll try to find here.

For just bullion coins, I don't think it matters, though I don't care for the pink hue myself. If I were pulling some nice ones out to put in a book or a tube, I wouldn't clean 'em.

Lovely dimes, the liveliest coin, the one that really jingles. --Truman Capote

Coins are the metallic footprints of the history of nations. --William H. Woodin
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jonflyfish
Penny Hoarding Member



USA
693 Posts

Posted - 07/30/2009 :  13:58:24  Show Profile  Send jonflyfish a Yahoo! Message Send jonflyfish a Private Message
I have naturally cleaned all of my copper. After running the Ryedale for a few hrs my hands are full of gunk.

The first panacea for a mismanaged nation is inflation of the currency; second is war. Both bring a temporary (and false) prosperity; both bring a permanent ruin. But both are the refuge of political and economic opportunities.
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jtm3
Penny Pincher Member



USA
187 Posts

Posted - 07/31/2009 :  09:09:47  Show Profile Send jtm3 a Private Message
I wouldn't bother cleanig my ugly abes.

quote:
Originally posted by brian0918

Again, people, I cannot stress this enough - DO NOT clean wheats, Indian Heads, or anything old, AU or higher, rare, error variety, etc. You will completely destroy the value!



Brian, the name of this sub-forum is Copper Penny BULLION Investing. Most posts revolve around the bullion aspect of the penny. Copper penny bullion investing encompasses the Lincoln Memorial Cent 1959-1982. These coins are typically worth next to nothing to numismatists (I am one). Plus one that has been gunked up enough to clean is most likely to scratched up to sell for numismatic value.

JTM

Copper Cent Hoarding Wiki

coppercenthoarding.wikia.com

+637 posts
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PennehChaos.
Penny Collector Member



USA
269 Posts

Posted - 07/31/2009 :  12:16:13  Show Profile Send PennehChaos. a Private Message
quote:
Originally posted by jtm3

quote:
Originally posted by brian0918

Again, people, I cannot stress this enough - DO NOT clean wheats, Indian Heads, or anything old, AU or higher, rare, error variety, etc. You will completely destroy the value!



Brian, the name of this sub-forum is Copper Penny BULLION Investing. Most posts revolve around the bullion aspect of the penny. Copper penny bullion investing encompasses the Lincoln Memorial Cent 1959-1982. These coins are typically worth next to nothing to numismatists (I am one). Plus one that has been gunked up enough to clean is most likely to scratched up to sell for numismatic value.



That is true. However, going through as many cents as some of us do, some collectible coins are invariably turned up, and I think Brian's warning is well-placed.

Personally, I don't see the value of cleaning bullion pennehs either, unless you're planning to smelt/refine them yourself. What exactly is the gain?

Considering Verizon Business service? Perhaps you'd like to consider a nice drain cleaner enema instead?
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jtm3
Penny Pincher Member



USA
187 Posts

Posted - 08/02/2009 :  19:50:33  Show Profile Send jtm3 a Private Message
Well for me I would rather have a gunked up 1909 VDB S(w/o knowing) penny in my "ugly abes" box than have one in my coin drawer and the guilt of having cleaned it.

Copper Cent Hoarding Wiki

coppercenthoarding.wikia.com

+637 posts
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