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If a coin comes back cleaned
coffeyce
Posts: 1,050 ✭✭✭
Im curious and I know we have a lot of experience on the boards here.
If a coin comes back cleaned is there anything I can do to ever make it able to get a straight grade again.
I have two that were body bagged one I can see some cleaning lines on one side and the other really cant tell.
Ive heard people mention wrapping in tissue and put in window in sun for toning. Heard some people say dipping (This from reading different posts over the years.)
SO I guess im curious is it a pretty much lost cause once body bagged or time can change this/
chris
If a coin comes back cleaned is there anything I can do to ever make it able to get a straight grade again.
I have two that were body bagged one I can see some cleaning lines on one side and the other really cant tell.
Ive heard people mention wrapping in tissue and put in window in sun for toning. Heard some people say dipping (This from reading different posts over the years.)
SO I guess im curious is it a pretty much lost cause once body bagged or time can change this/
chris
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<< <i>If a coin comes back cleaned is there anything I can do to ever make it able to get a straight grade again. >>
Not really. Yes, you could retone it as mentioned, but that will still be recognizable as secondary toning, and it still wouldn't straight grade.
The only way time might change that is if you carried a cleaned coin in your pocket for several months and let it wear down by a grade or two and then left it out to tone, but you wouldn't want to do that.
Collector since 1976. On the CU forums here since 2001.
I've done that successfully in the past.
The name is LEE!
Hoard the keys.
If the coin was improperly cleaned,say by a bad dip or some other cleaning fluid then retoning is a possibility. This will take time and I do mean time as in over a year or more for the coin to develop a new market acceptable surface.
If the coin was cleaned with a mild abrasive cleaner like wet baking soda etc and shows only very fine hairline scratches then the only real option is to turn it into a pocket piece, this has the draw back of lowering the grade by 2 or more points or even damaging the coin more.
If these coins are necessary for you and you can put them in an album then do so other wise you would be better off finding some that are not damaged. There are other things you can do but going beyond what I have mentioned here could and would be considered doctoring and would not be well received.
I don't know if this help and is just my opinion.
Worry is the interest you pay on a debt you may not owe.
"Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
"Everything you say should be true, but not everything true should be said."----Voltaire
The first is sometimes the situation is borderline, and the piece might get a grade on a subsequent submission. At other times, for whatever reason, the grading company just gets it wrong.
I've had this go both ways with both of the major services. I once had an 1839-O half dollar that NGC bounced back at me as "cleaned" in a body bag. The piece had been dipped, but it had not been cleaned. I sent it to PCGS, and they graded it as an AU-55, which what it was. In the second instance I had an 1858 Fly Eagle cent that PCGS labeled as "cleaned." Once more I thought they were wrong. I could not see any hairlines, and the coin had not been polished. I sent it to NGC, and they graded it MS-64, which once again I thought was correct.
You might try sending the coin to NGC, but with no pictures I can't give any strong advice on it. The coin might be messed up, and you would just be wasting your money to send it to the other service.
The other alternative, which I have never tried, is to carry it as a pocket piece for a while and wear it down to the next grade. That would remove the cleaning hairlines, if they are "run of the mill" cleaning marks, but you would end up with a lower grade. This strategy might not work with a heavily polished or hairlined piece because in that instance you really have to get down to basics which might involve an total change of surface via wear. In the worst case, the main devices might be so impaired that nothing can be done.
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If you have any doubt about whether a coin has been cleaned or not, pass.
<< <i>Study the coin, see if you can tell why they may have thought it had been cleaned and the possibly resubmit raw.
I've done that successfully in the past. >>
If it's a $20 coin, why bother? If it's a valuable piece it deserves professional restoration, if possible.
The right answer depends entirely on the exact appearance of the coin. The only way to get truly useful advice is to have it reviewed by an expert, in-hand. Some coins are beyond hope. Some experts are too.
No problem. If you aren't looking for attractive, just straight grade... Humid bathroom window sill, just stand the coin up and lean it against something ever so slightly. It will NATURALLY TONE over in 6-18 months. Once per month, pick up the coin to blow the dust off. I have done this twice with 100% success. The second time I did this was with a coin I cherrypicked raw in a 2x2 and I could tell that the dealer cleaned ALL of his coins....and I toned it over a bit prior to getting it graded and attributed.
Good luck!
Not really looking for much these days but if I were, it might be a toner.
<< <i>I have had success with this problem. Silver low mint state coin came back cleaned...it was all white and had some very slight impaired luster but no HARSH cleaning lines or scratches.
No problem. If you aren't looking for attractive, just straight grade... Humid bathroom window sill, just stand the coin up and lean it against something ever so slightly. It will NATURALLY TONE over in 6-18 months. Once per month, pick up the coin to blow the dust off. I have done this twice with 100% success. The second time I did this was with a coin I cherrypicked raw in a 2x2 and I could tell that the dealer cleaned ALL of his coins....and I toned it over a bit prior to getting it graded and attributed.
Good luck! >>
I've seen it recommended that wrapping a coin in a Taco Bell napkin will naturally tone a coin over time. Anyone here try this? How did it work?
Worry is the interest you pay on a debt you may not owe.
"Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
"Everything you say should be true, but not everything true should be said."----Voltaire