<< <i>the point that a few of you continue to miss, & always have in other dip-thread, is that for those of us who like original coins, there's no choice. you can't take an original bust half w/ it's original patina, & dip the he11 out of it, & then it's blast white. takes a few seconds.
but you can't take a freakin blast-white bust half & suddenly make it original again. yet we continue to have butt-wipe "dealers" & "colletors" out there who JUST CAN'T ACCEPT a coin the way it looks the JUST GOTTA "IMPROVE" IT w/ a quick dip here, a quick dip there, here a dip there a dip everywhere a dip dip.
LEAVE THE COINS ALONE.
if you just gotta have that blast white look, fine. great! i'm all for you collecting what you like. buy 1 that's already dipped. don't dip a coin to make it blast white, buy 1 that's ALREADY blast white.
please
K S >>
I agree with you; I adore original coins and can't stand 'blast white' for a coin over 100 years of age.
Proud recipient of YOU SUCK more than once and less than 100 times.
As a rookie I am not exactly sure what "dipping" is. From this post I have gathered that it is basically an acid wash to give old coins a like-new appearance. I myself would not be able to tell the difference so I may own a few of these already. I would prefer to own unaltered coins be it dipped, whizzed, toned, or otherwise. I think there should be a litmus test or something to determine whether anything unnatural has occured. Anyway, thats my 2 cents.
BTW does the salt and vinegar bath for dirty copper count as dipping? What is the approved method for cleaning dirty coins? I also do a little metal detecting and obviously most of the coins I find are not sparkling.
Comments
<< <i>the point that a few of you continue to miss, & always have in other dip-thread, is that for those of us who like original coins, there's no choice. you can't take an original bust half w/ it's original patina, & dip the he11 out of it, & then it's blast white. takes a few seconds.
but you can't take a freakin blast-white bust half & suddenly make it original again. yet we continue to have butt-wipe "dealers" & "colletors" out there who JUST CAN'T ACCEPT a coin the way it looks the JUST GOTTA "IMPROVE" IT w/ a quick dip here, a quick dip there, here a dip there a dip everywhere a dip dip.
LEAVE THE COINS ALONE.
if you just gotta have that blast white look, fine. great! i'm all for you collecting what you like. buy 1 that's already dipped. don't dip a coin to make it blast white, buy 1 that's ALREADY blast white.
please
K S >>
I agree with you; I adore original coins and can't stand 'blast white' for a coin over 100 years of age.
BTW does the salt and vinegar bath for dirty copper count as dipping? What is the approved method for cleaning dirty coins? I also do a little metal detecting and obviously most of the coins I find are not sparkling.
Thanks,
Leevee
<< <i> DIPPING MOVES METAL, so even by your own def'n, dipping is doctoring.
>>
E-Z-est coin cleaner has a pH of 1.5. That's 3 times as acid as lemon juice, but only 1/3 as
acid as your stomach.