Acetone and spotting eagles.
Swampboy
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Well I decided to give my Eagle an acetone bath. I was worried about milk spotting and it's probably
good I was. There was a rainbow effect to the left of the motto and I figured this must be the infamous residue the Mint can't be bothered cleaning of.
I followed robertpr's suggestions How to use Acetone and what it does.... .
After a soak of five and then twenty minutes in two fresh batches of acetone this is what I can see...

That rainbow residue disolved into two little spots you can see i n the light area.
I think I'll soak it over night and see what I have in the morning.
good I was. There was a rainbow effect to the left of the motto and I figured this must be the infamous residue the Mint can't be bothered cleaning of.
I followed robertpr's suggestions How to use Acetone and what it does.... .
After a soak of five and then twenty minutes in two fresh batches of acetone this is what I can see...

That rainbow residue disolved into two little spots you can see i n the light area.
I think I'll soak it over night and see what I have in the morning.
"Inspiration exists, but it has to find you working" Pablo Picasso
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Comments
I personally use a hardware store grade acetone, but I'm typically not treating high MS or PR material with acetone.
Use only in a very well ventilated room, it is dangerous and inflamable.
When I didn't see the words pure or 100% on the label of either can I picked up the second can.
So I can't vouch it's 100% acetone.
The coin came with two little dark flecks one on Liberty's arm and one over her left breast.
I knew it only needed a dip to prevent spotting but I was trying to see if the acetone would have any effect on the dark spots.
After the initial five minutes the little rainbow effect was more prominent and the specks were smaller; that's when I put the piece back in for twenty minutes.
Thanks
-Gil
edit you bet I used it in a well ventilated area. Even so, half hour later I had a twitch in my eyebrow!!
"Inspiration exists, but it has to find you working" Pablo Picasso
Another thing to do is, right after removing the coin from the acetone, is to place the coin on a clean cotton cloth (an old shirt will do, has to be 100% cotton or it can dissolve. Polyester will dissolve in acetone and leave a sticky residue everywhere it touches) wait a second and then carefully turn it over and wait a few seconds for any remaining acetone to evaporate. Do this while wearing white cotton gloves and be careful to place the coin gently on the cotton cloth without any rubbing action that can hairline the coin. The cotton will wick off any excess acetone and further reduce the possibility of any residue being left on the coin.
I have no idea if rinsing a SAE in acetone will prevent the dreaded milkspots though.
This solvent is not Acetone but I understand that it has similar properties.
I usually just swirl the coin in a glass cointaining the liquid and then dip it in a separate glass as a rinse. Then let it air dry. Mostly I'm cleaning gunk off high grade circulated material and not Uncirculated or Proof coins.
Now that said, what ASEs are being treated for milk spots? Uncirculated or Proof? And does this treatement really prevent the dreaded milk spots?
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<< <i>Are you saying the acetone caused the rainbow residue? >>
Yes. If the acetone picks up oil/s from transfer lines, storage tanks, transport tanks, filling equipment it will leave that type of rainbow residue. Its possible that the cans that it comes in had oil residues in them before they were filled.
<< <i>You can pick up 100% acetone from Wal-Mart in the cosmetics section. >>
But that is no guarantee that it doesn't have any other residues in it; it only means that it doesn't have anything else deliberately added to it. If you want really good stuff buy pesticide grade or HPLC grade from a chemical supply house if you have access to those sources. You might even visit your local pharmacy.