Milk spots...do they affect modern silver commems too?
After reading Rena's heartbreaking thread about his 1995W SAE, I wondered if the milk spot problem has affected modern $1 silver commemoratives too? I haven't heard anything about them like I have the SAE's. Are they produced differently?
If the commems don't seem to have the same tendency towards spotting it might be a good place for the Mint, PCGS, etc. to start in their investigation of the cause.
If the commems don't seem to have the same tendency towards spotting it might be a good place for the Mint, PCGS, etc. to start in their investigation of the cause. Collecting coins, medals and currency featuring "The Sower"
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I don't let it bother me. The main coins that I want in my commemorative sets are the gold. The others are kind of like frosting.
BUT if my gold coins were to develop copper stains, which they never have, I'd be a very unhappy puppy.
Rim toning and such I can see, but these "milk spots" are really distracting from the eye appeal, at least on my SAE's they are.
They are almost like a "skin cancer" on the surface of the coin. White, scaly, ugly!
I HATE milk spots.
<< <i>It must be those cherry wood boxes that keep your coins so pretty!
No, some people think that the wood in the boxes can result in the opposite.
But I'll say this. I've got a 1984 Olympic set, and so far as I know (I was not the original owner, thank goodness because I would have lost half my money by now) the coins have been in there for 20+ years, and they have not turned. Virtually ditto for the Statue of Liberty set I own. Those coins have not toned in over 19 years.
The Constitution set I own which I did buy from the mint and succeeded in losing half my money
I think that its more of the luck of the draw.
<< <i>I have heard...compressed air has chemicals in it and if used to blow off particles it could cause these milk spots! You never know. When I have used compressed air on my computer parts, it is very cold, when it starts to warm up it leaves droplets of condinsation...this could be what has happened to cause these milk spots on these coins. >>
I feel like this could be a topic for "MythBusters" on A&E. And along those lines, after reading your theory I think it sounds plausible!
what is the material content of the white spot?
i remember reading a thread a while back that was quite long on this topic,
but it is buried now.