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How to clean coins???

Here we go with the hot topic!!!
I have a friend that has bucks of coins that have been in water (wishing well) for some time. He is wanting to clean the coins so he can turn them in to the bank. I suggested a tumbler with walnut shells. Any other suggestions. He has several 5 gal bucks to do.
Thanks
I have a friend that has bucks of coins that have been in water (wishing well) for some time. He is wanting to clean the coins so he can turn them in to the bank. I suggested a tumbler with walnut shells. Any other suggestions. He has several 5 gal bucks to do.
Thanks
Rob
0
Comments
For those who don't understand the walnut shell and tumbler idea. It is used to lightly clean metal parts. This method is used to recondition brass cartridges when reloading bullets for guns.
It's kind of a cardinal sin around here to "clean" original surfaced early silver coinage, that's why your question sounded a little scary.
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I will pass that idea to him.
I know thought about cleaning coins. I have been a collectordealer for for some time.
Thought I would get some input and have some fun with the question. I would not think anything other than clad and copper (zinc) cents would be in the bucks. The store as only been open less than 10yrs.
Fish tank? Lots of coins? Did all of the fish die? Yikes!
If you have a tumbler, then that is the best method. Why waste the time and expose yourself to the risks of using acetone for corroded pocket change? Put the coins in a tumbler with walnut shells and walk away for a short spell. Then take the coins to the bank.
I wouldn't just dump them without checking that they aren't fused together.
so far, the tumbler idea works, or just roll them.
PS have they been checked for silver coins yet?
Be sure and check the reject slot every so often for the silver as you shove it in.
Yes, the cement mixer will probably work for a super large volume of coins.
<< <i>Banks don't like rusty coins >>
Too bad.
Erik
<< <i>Thanks for the input. I will pass it along to him. I will let you know the results. I will try to get pics. >>
Thanks, keep us updated! I find it interesting.
...as a single guy who burns enough food trying to cook, I can vouch for how well it cleans the pans
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<< <i>Seems like it would be a lot of work and perhaps unnecessary. I'd take a sampling to a Coinstar machine and see if it took them. That would be the easiest and I'd guess the Coinstar fee would be comparable to the time and any cost associated to cleaning them. >>
My thought exactly. Some grocery stores have Coinstar machines where you get full value if you spend the money at that store. Of course this may or may not be practical depending on how many coins he has.
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