Using Potassium cyanide to clean silver coins
OK wowwee I know this will get tons of "dont" posts but let me say first I am an alternative process photographer with extensive experience in using this chemical.
1/4 gram of KCn in water, put in the tarnished clouded silver coin and it dissolves the layers of scum in an instant.
Yup I love toning and wont advise anyone to remove it, I done this just as an experiment on a generic Morgan.
This is the way the old time collectors cleaned their coins.
1/4 gram of KCn in water, put in the tarnished clouded silver coin and it dissolves the layers of scum in an instant.
Yup I love toning and wont advise anyone to remove it, I done this just as an experiment on a generic Morgan.
This is the way the old time collectors cleaned their coins.
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Comments
<< <i>OK wowwee I know this will get tons of "dont" posts but let me say first I am an alternative process photographer with extensive experience in using this chemical.
>>
Hmmm... I bet you have a whole 'nother world of uses for platinum and palladium, too.
I seem to recall that cyanide is less likely to give a coin a dipped-out appearance -- any truth to this?
How does Joe Hobbyist get access to these chemicals? (Might as well PM me if a dozen nervous nellies show up on this thread.)
some ugly toners.
bob
It restored full luster and cartwheel gloss and cleaned into the lettering etc. Very effective,
KCn is commercially used in most metal plating and in refining silver and gold. Small quantities WERE available through Artcraft Chemicals in Schenectedy NY but he is no longer carrying it due to requests from lovelorn teenage girls. KCn is a reducing agent for silver salts as well as mettalic silver, though it takes MUCH longer to work on the metal itself.
<< <i>KCn is a reducing agent for silver salts as well as mettalic silver, though it takes MUCH longer to work on the metal itself. >>
Does this property mark an advantage over other reducing agents?
We use it in place of Hypo in wet plate photography becuase it give a cleaner deeper black in the image, without the browning effect of hypo, which contains sulfer.
It was said to have the look of an early cyanide cleaning.
I don't know if that is right or wrong.
The collector was Sanford Saltus, a famous American collector. He died in a London hotel as you describe. The ANS has an award named after him because he was a generous donor to the ANS.
The fact that cyanide would reduce ionic silver to metallic Ag(0) doesn't exactly jive with its use as a large quantity leaching agent in lagoons of silver or gold residues.
If you don't have significant experience with hazardous chemicals, reagents like KCN are very dangerous to use anywhere.
Please perserve the history of coins without wrecking them. Buy stuff you like instead of creating it. It may look great after you do it but in the long run it will be ruined.
President, Racine Numismatic Society 2013-2014; Variety Resource Dimes; See 6/8/12 CDN for my article on Winged Liberty Dimes; Ebay
In honor of the memory of Cpl. Michael E. Thompson
Im just passing on this little tidbit of info. There are four fatal doses of cyanide in one gram. It is *NOTHING TO MESS WITH* if you dont know what you're doing. I do, however, know what Im doing with it. The main concern with any cyanide soloution is to NEVER let any acid interact with it. The gas that arises is extremely toxic. Early photogaphers frequently had missteps with their fixer, by an amazing chemical coincidence, the developer, which is a mildly acidic soloution of ferrous sulfate, was the antidote. By an odder circumstance, today the antidote for cyanide poisining is an injection of sodium thiosulfate....the *other* fixing agent in photography
I **REALLY** dont want to advise this, or suggest doing it, Im just passing out the info.
One word DON'T.
``https://ebay.us/m/KxolR5
KCN yields K+ (aq) and CN- (aq)
Right? It is not a complex right?
I just looked it up and found it in this NCS article:NCS Article
Greg Hansen, Melbourne, FL Click here for any current EBAY auctions Multiple "Circle of Trust" transactions over 14 years on forum
<< <i>Hmmm...some chemistry, potassium cyanide dissoved in water is:
KCN yields K+ (aq) and CN- (aq)
Right? It is not a complex right? >>
Silver ions complex with cyanide!!
Somehow, I just don't believe that I'd enjoy this..........
I knew it would happen.
It is true that cyanide gas is given off with any addition of acidic solution into the dissolved cyanide solution. One breath of this gas will be all it takes.... you will have just about enough time to know that you screwed up.....
If you have a solution of that cyanide compound, and somehow spill some of your ginger ale or cola into it.... the gas will be released (these drinks are acidic).
If I recall, cyanide gas was what Xylon B? was, in the days of Nazi Germany.
<< <i>So its (Ag2CN)- complex? >>
I believe that would be correct tho properly written as Ag(CN)2- You may wish to consult Cotton and Wilkinson just to be sure.
<< <i>I got it, the Ag is + and each CN is -. So its Ag(CN)2 - >>
Zyklon B, an insecticide which released hydrogen cyanide when the crystals were exposed to the air. Ironically developed for pest control by a German Jew in 1933.
Make sure the room is WELL VENTILATED.
Make sure to wear RUBBER GLOVES (or your fingers will turn brown).
Dont leave any other containers open.
Flush down the toilet when the solution becomes cloudy.
Keep it away from all other persons.
Awe the price of white coins!
<< <i>A few words of advice if you decide to use this for cleaning gold or silver coins...
Make sure the room is WELL VENTILATED.
>>
I was thinking that a laboratory fume hood would be the only way to go (lest anyone here believe that I really am crazy). I don't have any coins -- short of moderns -- that I would have any interest in dipping, but my curiousity remains: is this in some way a better reducing agent than contemporary alternatives?
Does NCS use cyanide chemicals?
Rob
"Those guys weren't Fathers they were...Mothers."
Will’sProoflikes
<< <i>Read page 91, "A Deadly Misadventure In Coin Cleaning" in the Official Redbook of Morgan Silver Dollars, by QDB. >>
Thanks -- just did that. Rather dreadful that Saltus had allegedly purchased the KCN just one day earlier.
Interesting to me is that the reporting of the day said that KCN was reputed to "have the desired effect when other methods fail," but QDB goes on that the compound was "used to remove tiny hairlines and scratches, by etching away a few microns of the metal surface" (my emphasis). If that's entirely correct, then that's not exactly what I'm looking for.
is the risk of using this hazardous stuff really worth improving your coin for a few extra dollars?
if I was the OP, I would have never posted this info.
"“Those who sacrifice liberty for security/safety deserve neither.“(Benjamin Franklin)
"I only golf on days that end in 'Y'" (DE59)
However, I am qualified and experienced in its use (though not in the coin field) and just though it would be an intersting tidbit.
You know, you are all at a much greater risk of calamity every day you sit behind the wheel of your auto.
So, case closed. BTW I know personally at least two dozen individuals who do alternative process photography using this chemical as a fixing agent and have had no ill effects or misfortunes during the past decade.
sorry sorry sorry sorry
I will and say 1000 hail marys and write 100 times "I will not post informative yet useless tidbits of information on message boards which are inhabited by gentlemen with a lot of free time and an active imagination"
I love you all.......Never meant this to get out of hand.
In honor of the memory of Cpl. Michael E. Thompson
Olive oil for copper, MS-70, Acetone and
distilled water.
Usually, folks that are all knowing, are usually the
very folks that poison them selves, shoot someone
have car accidents or drown while swimming during
dangerous conditions.
Camelot