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Is it possible to tone in a slab?

Just curious if anyone has coins that were relatively not toned, had them slabbed just to find in a few years they were nicely toned for some unknown reason?
If yes, please post pics. I am trying to understand if it is possible to expose the slab to some elements (temperature, etc...) that may cause the coin to tone. I know the slab limits the contaminents but is it possilbe for those contaminents to enter the slab, and cause a reaction?
If yes, please post pics. I am trying to understand if it is possible to expose the slab to some elements (temperature, etc...) that may cause the coin to tone. I know the slab limits the contaminents but is it possilbe for those contaminents to enter the slab, and cause a reaction?
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I did however have state quarters turn gold on me. Back when I was doing a registry set of those, I had a few that got that golden look while they were in the slab. The question is, were they going to turn that color anyways? Or did they really "tone" in the slab because of something else I had in my safe?
Take the older PCI slabs and SAE coins. I have some that are toned and have seen some nice ones that I didn't have. They were slabbed as 100% white yet they are toning.....so, over a few years, you can tell they went from 100% white (untoned) to toned.
I am sure others tone as well, just not as dramatically.
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<< <i>Is it possible to tone in a slab? >>
If you submit your coins in the polybags within a polyvynil flip, the sonic sealing process can cause the coin to tone in the slab. Only use mylar flips sans the polybag when submitting to a TPGS.
I also know about a private test done by a company that is considered to be a 3rd world grading service by members on this forum. That test had mostly the same results and showed that their product was actually the best on the market for preventing toning at that time.
Andrew
Last February I saw an 1857-S double eagle from the SS Central America hoard that gone back to its old copper stained ways. To me the coin looked horrible, but I am getting a general sense that many people seem to view all toning as good toning. Still if you have an eye for what is attractive and what is not, the problems that I have seen with these processed coins are pretty disturbing.
Semper ubi sub ubi
October 06, 2005 was when these two images were taken.
The slabs were wrapped in a canvas bank bank for a few months.
Steve
KNOCK THIS OFF! You could be considered "silly."
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