Coin Cleaning Book...secret book coin dealers dont want you to know about
ScarsdaleCoin
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Jon Lerner - Scarsdale Coin - www.CoinHelp.com
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Comments
Cameron Kiefer
<< <i>Please do not think you can snipe it at the end for a penny because I might just end my auctions >>
Then why not just set a reserve or a higher start price?
re sniping...because its just not fair.....so sometimes I end the auction early...that way you cant snipe it....
<< <i>so sometimes I end the auction early...that way you cant snipe it.... >>
will cause me to avoid your auctions in the future. Your verbose fine print section is probably costing you bids as well.
<< <i>Please do not think you can snipe it at the end for a penny because I might just end my auctions >>
<< <i>AGAIN MY AUCTIONS ARE THE REAL DEAL...no reserve and starts just 1 cent.. >>
Doesn't sound like the "real" deal to me.
Russ, NCNE
Ending auctions early is not the "real deal".
Great transactions with oih82w8, JasonGaming, Moose1913.
<< <i>Humm... that reminds me, I need to check on my black splotched FE cent and see how it's been doing. It's been soaking in olive oil for many months now. >>
Years ago I went to a ANA seminar that dealt with grading (and cleaning) coins - One of the speakers talked about the various methods of cleaning copper coins (that included CN coins also) - Mentioned that he was experimenting with using olive oil, but didn't give the results - After the seminar, I went and asked him about the Olive Oil - he said - he wasn't sure it was working, but maybe he neededto leave it soaking longer - I asked him how long it had been soaking - he said "only about 3 years - maybe I need to give it another year or 2"
You may be in for a long wait on the Olive Oil!
“It ain't what you don't know that gets you into trouble. It's what you know for sure that just ain't so.” Mark Twain
Newmismatist
<< <i>Humm... that reminds me, I need to check on my black splotched FE cent and see how it's been doing. It's been soaking in olive oil for many months now. >>
You've wasted months on that? You could have boiled it 5 minutes in salt water and it woulda been like new. You coulda sold it three times over all ready.
Buy Jon's book, man. Learn the tricks.
Ray
11. FRANK, C.: Coin Preservation Handbook. Coingard Industries, 1964. 135 pages, blue cloth, gilt, near as-new. [.7#] (20) . . . $30
Glen
Great spirits have always encountered violent opposition from mediocre minds.-Albert Einstein
<< <i>
<< <i>Please do not think you can snipe it at the end for a penny because I might just end my auctions >>
<< <i>AGAIN MY AUCTIONS ARE THE REAL DEAL...no reserve and starts just 1 cent.. >>
Doesn't sound like the "real" deal to me.
Russ, NCNE >>
There's more;
"So someone always really wins…. Most of my auctions start at only 1 cent........." & "Some people think I might be insane but I know that the fair price always comes out in the wash" (how when you end auctions early I don''t know..)
in that really tiny fine print is states no auctions that start for 1 penny are returnable, and nothing graded by is PCGS, ANACS, NGC etc., and whatever else that is returnable has to be returned in 3 days with 15% restock fee. No, not the "real deal" to me either. What is really funny is the NGC MS65 RD Lincoln 1c being sold on the merit of being RD - no date is mentioned - only rhe "rarity" of an NGC RD Lincoln.
Billy
WH
<< <i>re sniping...because its just not fair.....so sometimes I end the auction early...that way you cant snipe it.... >>
What is not fair about sniping? Anyone who wants the item can snipe it, if some people are too lazy or too slow to snipe with success that does not make it unfair in my opinion. Good luck with your auction!
WNC Coins, LLC
1987-C Hendersonville Road
Asheville, NC 28803
wnccoins.com
peacockcoins
This one's even cheaper than that
peacockcoins
I've been told I tolerate fools poorly...that may explain things if I have a problem with you. Current ebay items - Nothing at the moment
This book is quite scarce and a collectible in its own right, sliderider, notwithstanding your opinions about cleaning coins. Frank gives the reader a lot of information about the factors of coin deterioration irregardless of the reader's "honesty." Mine is a First Edition, unsigned and nearly "new" condition. Not a single spot from the chemical concoctions for cleaning that Frank offers can be found on my copy of this book.
Chlorinated Solvent Emulsion Cleaner
Oleic Acid .67 oz.
Triethanolamine .33 oz.
Trichlorethylene or
Carbon Tetrachloride 8.00 oz.
Ethyl Alcohol 1.00 oz.
Heat the oleic acid and triethanolamine, in separate containers, to about 140 degrees Fahrenheit: add the triethanolamine to the oleic acid, agitating vigorously; cool to 86 degrees Fahrenheit; add the solvents with vigorous agitation.
Chlorinated solvents will remove oils, greases, waxes, soluble soils, and a host of other compounds, much as petroleum solvents do, except with greater speed and thoroughness. They will not remove salts, perspiration, oxidation, tarnish, corrosion products, many chemical dusts and fumes.
Great spirits have always encountered violent opposition from mediocre minds.-Albert Einstein
Actually if I don't forget again, I plan to try the "potato" method, where you slip the coin inside a potato for a while
and see what happens. The potato appears to cause a bit of electrylosis to form helping remove corrosion.
I figure it's worth a shot. Remember the old potato powered clocks and things.
as for some of the rest of you
and some elbow grease.
Camelot
http://www.nsc.org/library/chemical/carbonte.htm
Carbon tetrachloride is listed in the National Toxicology Program's Fifth Annual Report on Carcinogens as a "substance which may reasonably be anticipated to be carcinogen." Short-term exposure by inhalation or ingestion can cause death. Short and long-term exposure also affects the brain, the liver, and the kidneys, in some cases causing death.
There is some evidence that exposure to carbon tetrachloride causes liver cancer in humans; there is limited evidence that exposure may damage the developing fetus. Repeated contact can cause thickening and cracking of the skin. Effects on the brain are usually quite rapid. The most common effects are dizziness, lightheadedness, nausea and vomiting, which can cause permanent damage to nerve cells. In severe cases, these effects can lead rapidly to stupor, coma, unconsciousness or death. Exposure can make the heart beat irregularly or stop. The chemical may irritate the eyes on contact. When carbon tetrachloride is emitted into the air, it rises to the atmosphere and depletes the ozone layer. Depletion of the ozone layer is believed to increase human exposure to ultraviolet rays, leading to increased skin cancer, eye diseases and disorders, and possible disruption of the immune system. Persons who are moderate to heavy drinkers are at greatly increased risk of liver and/or kidney injury following ingestion or inhalation of carbon tetrachloride. Substantial exposures to alcohols and ketones which increase the toxicity of carbon tetrachloride may occur in occupational settings, or in certain instances in the use of household products containing these chemicals.
Trichloroethylene(TCE) has the same bad health effects as Carbon tetrachloride
How can trichloroethylene affect my health?
Breathing small amounts may cause headaches, lung irritation, dizziness, poor coordination, and difficulty concentrating.
Breathing large amounts of trichloroethylene may cause impaired heart function, unconsciousness, and death. Breathing it for long periods may cause nerve, kidney, and liver damage.
Drinking large amounts of trichloroethylene may cause nausea, liver damage, unconsciousness, impaired heart function, or death.
Drinking small amounts of trichloroethylene for long periods may cause liver and kidney damage, impaired immune system function, and impaired fetal development in pregnant women, although the extent of some of these effects is not yet clear.
Skin contact with trichloroethylene for short periods may cause skin rashes.
How likely is trichloroethylene to cause cancer?
Some studies with mice and rats have suggested that high levels of trichloroethylene may cause liver, kidney, or lung cancer. Some studies of people exposed over long periods to high levels of trichloroethylene in drinking water or in workplace air have found evidence of increased cancer. Although, there are some concerns about the studies of people who were exposed to trichloroethylene, some of the effects found in people were similar to effects in animals.
In its 9th Report on Carcinogens, the National Toxicology Program (NTP) determined that trichloroethylene is “reasonably anticipated to be a human carcinogen.” The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) has determined that trichloroethylene is “probably carcinogenic to humans.”
I would urge you to not use these substances
WS
<< <i>DiHydrogen monoxide has killed more people than all other chemicals combined. >>
Yes, but more people annually drown in water vs drowning in DiHydrogen monoxide.
peacockcoins
I wouldn't recommend that anyone with little or no experience in handling/using toxic substances buy the various chemicals and concoct the Chlorinated Solvent Emulsion cleaner either.
Great spirits have always encountered violent opposition from mediocre minds.-Albert Einstein
"Since organic solvents are extremely effective in coin cleaning processes, all collectors should be fully aware of the potential dangers concerning their use. It could be said that all organic solvents are unsafe based upon the fact, that with few exceptions, they are inflammable, explosive, and their vapors, if inhaled, or absorbed through the skin, are asphyxiants, anesthetics, or irritants. In this sense they are all poisonous....the use of proper precautions cannot be overemphasized..."
Great spirits have always encountered violent opposition from mediocre minds.-Albert Einstein
I think cleaning and altering coins (altering may be redundant depending on how you define cleaning) is still common and accepted depending on how you clean and alter them.
My wife's family is burying her uncle this week. What he did wrong was not wear lung protection equipment while being around various glues. He was a cabinet maker. He was in his mid 50s. He has also been disabled for the past 5 or so years.
I worked a case years ago where some kids got ahold of a good amount of mercury - they still use it in some thermostats. Messed with it in the house. Got in the carpet and down into the foundation. Not good. Not good at all. Had to bulldoze the house and cart it away.
If you want to shuffle and drool, cool. Just don't harm your family over some coins. Send 'em to NCS or use standard cleaning agents.
I'm with you. A guy who has a serious passion for coins and has virtually no books on coins isn't using his brain....to the detriment of his own enjoyment.
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Just a note to let you know that your order was received. I've processed it and will get the book on it's way to you. As an aside, I received 5 orders for the Preservation Handbook within the same hour of your order. Since yours came in first, obviously it was the one that was of priority. But now I have 4 angry coin guys on my hands since all of the other copies have dashed off of the market! The early bird apparently DOES get the worm!
www.crazybooklady.com
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Bookfinder.com
Could a coin that's been in a soft flip for say, 60 days only, eventually show signs of being contaminated by PVC even though after 60 days it is housed in an inert holder?
Great spirits have always encountered violent opposition from mediocre minds.-Albert Einstein