Acetone Bath Questions

What is the process of cleaning coins in acetone?
How much acetone should I use?
How many coins can I clean at once - can I put more then 1 coin in a jar at one time?
Should the jar be covered?
How often should I change the acetone?
How long should the coins soak for?
When I remove them and put them in "clean acetone" do I just dip for a few seconds, or let them soak again?
Same question as above for the distilled water.
If anyone can answer these questions, I would appreciate it. I have limited knowledge in how to clean them, but probably just under what I should know.
How much acetone should I use?
How many coins can I clean at once - can I put more then 1 coin in a jar at one time?
Should the jar be covered?
How often should I change the acetone?
How long should the coins soak for?
When I remove them and put them in "clean acetone" do I just dip for a few seconds, or let them soak again?
Same question as above for the distilled water.
If anyone can answer these questions, I would appreciate it. I have limited knowledge in how to clean them, but probably just under what I should know.
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Comments
Only as much acetone as it takes to do the job, not much. You can put in as many as you want but be aware that something taken off the surface of one might settle on another. Good to keep it few and rinse properly in fresh.
Don't use acetone near any ignition source or flame. Keep well ventilated. Covering is not necessary. Use acetone only once or twice, don't reuse for many many coins.
On the final rinse, it just needs a little swishing.
In honor of the memory of Cpl. Michael E. Thompson
Personally, I do not wear gloves when dealing with acetone in a lab setting. All I worry about is good fume hood.
<< <i>Acetone will really only effectively remove PVC, anything else on the coin will stay on the coin. >>
Acetone also removes adhesive residue quite well.
Good advice in this thread!
The name is LEE!
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
Acetone is the major component of fingernail polish remover; don't worry about getting it on your skin.
" Doesn't acetone melt the plastic used to make slabs? Removing tape residue from coins is O.K. but I wouldn't use it to remove the sticker residue from slabs."
Only use acetone on raw coins. If you want to remove the slab use a hammer.
<< <i>Doesn't acetone melt the plastic used to make slabs? Removing tape residue from coins is O.K. but I wouldn't use it to remove the sticker residue from slabs. >>
I did not intend to imply that I use acetone to remove sticker residue from slabs, only raw coins. Acetone will chew through plastic like a hot knife through butter and there is almost no way to fix the problem once this occurs!
Slab sticker residue is best removed with a piese of masking tape but you need to be carefule on some of the older green PCGS slabs as the gold colored embossing will also be removed. DLRC puts inventory stickers on all their slabbed coins which can be a real bear to removed without trashing that embossing!
As far as the red paint on coins, I doubt you would ever find that on a true collectible as the red usually indicates that the coin was used as "house" money. House money, although not too common today was used to feed jukeboxes by barteders/waitresses to keep the music going.
Edited for the Red comments.
The name is LEE!
Reallistically, don't clean coins. If as others have said you have some kind of plastic stuck to the coins, then the Acetone is what you want.
<< <i>if you mix Acetone, gasoline, paint thinner and fuel oil, put it all in a large metal container with thick walls, add your coins to the solutions, then light the whole thing.... >>
Ka-blooey!
Dang! There go the eyebrows!
The name is LEE!