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Is there a method to remove cleaning hairlines enough to get a coin graded by PCGS?(Pocket Test Star
I have several Peace dollars (AU and circulated) that have hairlines that are only visible when you hold the coin at an angle with bright lighting. The hairlines are light enough they aren't visible with normal room lighting. Has anyone succesfully "de-cleaned" a coin to remove hairlines and later had it graded by PCGS or NGC?
Thanks,
Charlie
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Thanks,
Charlie
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Comments
Russ, NCNE
If you don't want to lose detail or luster, people have been successful hiding hairlines by adding AT. The problem with AT is that you are changing the surfaces and hiding a problem. This can be considered morally objectionable.
Both can get into TPG slabs though whether the latter should is subject to vigorous debate.
<< <i>Carry them around in your pocket until they wear down enough to remove the hairlines.
Russ, NCNE >>
Put some color on it. Time honored tradition. Making a pocket piece out of it is too much of a downside risk.
<< <i>What's the best method of putting color on it? >>
Taco Bell napkins which are high in sulfur. Put it in a warm part of the house and give them some time.
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
<< <i>Put it in an album for twenty years. >>
Some people on this site think album toning is done overnight
And you're a coin doctor if you use a National Album
<< <i>
<< <i>Put it in an album for twenty years. >>
Some people on this site think album toning is done overnight
And you're a coin doctor if you use a National Album
Some people on this site say AT is anything that is done intentionally.
<< <i>
<< <i>
<< <i>Put it in an album for twenty years. >>
Some people on this site think album toning is done overnight
And you're a coin doctor if you use a National Album
Some people on this site say AT is anything that is done intentionally.
I would rather have the intent to toned than the intent to deceive by hiding hairlines.
<< <i>
<< <i>What's the best method of putting color on it? >>
Taco Bell napkins which are high in sulfur. Put it in a warm part of the house and give them some time. >>
I was thinking Rustoleum™
``https://ebay.us/m/KxolR5
I have heard this technique mentioned before, but has anyone on the forum actually done this successfully with a hairlined silver dollar?
<< <i>"Carry them around in your pocket until they wear down enough to remove the hairlines. Russ, NCNE"
I have heard this technique mentioned before, but has anyone on the forum actually done this successfully with a hairlined silver dollar? >>
Got 3 in my pocket for past 6 months....no changes yet....will let you know in a couple of years!
bob
<< <i>Is someone going to mention lasering? >>
lets see.....how many of us have lasers? now where did I put that durn laser.....lol
AL
<< <i>"Carry them around in your pocket until they wear down enough to remove the hairlines. Russ, NCNE"
I have heard this technique mentioned before, but has anyone on the forum actually done this successfully with a hairlined silver dollar? >>
I would venture to guess that fully 9/10ths of all pre 1900 heavily circulated coinage has undergone that "treatment", albeit not "intentionally". It was commonplace to polish coins back then, and after a while, circulating back and forth, traces of that original cleaning were completely worn away. And then 100 years later, they look original because they are original, except for the few who would re-polish them and then you've got to wear it down to a smooth disc before it's original again. Just my opinion.
I've never heard of it mentioned as a T.H.T- I'll have to make a mental note of that one...
So ...
Yeah, putting some color on is probably your best bet. None of the better methods available to us non-chemist type people are very quick, but you could accomplish it with time in a craft envelope, tissue paper, Mehrig or National album, wooden box (
There are some quicker ways, but I don't know most of them. And those that I do know are not only nefarious and wrong, they produce crappy looking coins that nobody would buy near grade whether they could see the hairlines or not.
The best bet is to avoid having hairlined coins to begin with.
Silver exposed to open air will turn darker and eventually black as a chunk of coal---scratches and all.
just thinking, what kind of medicine does a coin doctor prescribe?
SLABLETS!!!!
What is now proved was once only imagined. - William Blake
<< <i>Is someone going to mention lasering? >>
I usually hear about lasering for removing hairlines on the mirrored proof surfaces of gold coins. The laser actually melts the hairline causing it to flow back together. I doubt that lasering could be done on a nonmirrored frosty surface since it would leave a thin shiney line that would stand out against the frosty surfaces. I'm not sure if it would work on a proof or proof-like silver coin.
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
<< <i>
<< <i>Is someone going to mention lasering? >>
I usually hear about lasering for removing hairlines on the mirrored proof surfaces of gold coins. The laser actually melts the hairline causing it to flow back together. I doubt that lasering could be done on a nonmirrored frosty surface since it would leave a thin shiney line that would stand out against the frosty surfaces. I'm not sure if it would work on a proof or proof-like silver coin. >>
That sounds pretty cool. People doctors use lasers for surgery and coin docs can too. Seems like this approach can make the coin closer to the way it was when it left the mint.
<< <i>Just remember that there is NOTHING that can be done to move the coin closer to the way it was when it left the mint. Anything that you do will push it farther and farther away from its ideal state >>
I agree and I disagree.
The first statement is utterly true.
Once you are in the unfortunate position of having a crappy problem coin on your hands, though (and surely the better set of skills to develop is how not to wind up in this position) there are sometimes things you can do to make the appearance of the coin more palatable.
Everybody's tolerances for these things are different, but you'll see what I mean when you consider something like an XF45 bust half that got the baking soda treatment. Suppose this coin got the treatment yesterday, and is bright white today. Yuck. But suppose it got it in 1962, and has spent the interval in a 2x2 paper envelope in Grandpa's cigar box. It is still unoriginal. It still has hairlines & very little luster. But it is now covered in a pleasant patina of varying hues of brown, teal, violet, and rose. It is a pleasant coin, and acceptable as such to many collectors. Has it gotten closer to its original condition? Not hardly. But it has become somewhat more palatable from the perspective of the average hobbyist.
Time and "natural-ish" tone can help, some.
Paint that bugger up good and you can make Moon money$$$$
Look what color can do to an "improperly cleaned" proof! Can you say $26,450 PROFIT!!!
<< <i>Just to clarify: The first coin sold in an NCS holder as Proof, improperly cleaned for $19,550 on April 26, 2006
<a href="http://coins.ha.com/common/view_item.php?Sale_No=404&Lot_No=2164&src=pr">http://coins.ha.com/common/view_item.php?Sale_No=404&Lot_No=2164&src=pr</A>
And the after one, same coin in a PCGS PR-63 holder for $46,000 on January 2, 2007
<a href="http://coins.ha.com/common/view_item.php?Sale_No=422&Lot_No=1052&src=pr">http://coins.ha.com/common/view_item.php?Sale_No=422&Lot_No=1052&src=pr</A>
So it took less than 8 months to get that "centuries old toned look"? >>
>>
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BONGO HURTLES ALONG THE RAIN SODDEN HIGHWAY OF LIFE ON UNDERINFLATED BALD RETREAD TIRES
I am doing the "carry them around in your pocket" technique on two cleaned Peace Dollars as some have suggested. One dollar (VF) showed evidence of cleaning all over but on the other cleaned coin (AU), I painted the coin up with fingernail polish in areas where the cleaning was not evident (all of the reverse and 3/4 of the obverse). I put both these coins in a sock with a dozen other circulated coins and am now carrying them in my pocket. I have been carrying the coins in my pocket for about a week and can already see some improvement.
<< <i>Put some color on it. Time honored tradition.
I've never heard of it mentioned as a T.H.T- I'll have to make a mental note of that one...
When you're done chuckling take a look at DieClash's post. That's how it's done.
<< <i>I hate to disagree with mirabella, but....
Paint that bugger up good and you can make Moon money$$$$
Look what color can do to an "improperly cleaned" proof! Can you say $26,450 PROFIT!!!
<< <i>Just to clarify: The first coin sold in an NCS holder as Proof, improperly cleaned for $19,550 on April 26, 2006
<a href="http://coins.ha.com/common/view_item.php?Sale_No=404&Lot_No=2164&src=pr">http://coins.ha.com/common/view_item.php?Sale_No=404&Lot_No=2164&src=pr</A>
And the after one, same coin in a PCGS PR-63 holder for $46,000 on January 2, 2007
<a href="http://coins.ha.com/common/view_item.php?Sale_No=422&Lot_No=1052&src=pr">http://coins.ha.com/common/view_item.php?Sale_No=422&Lot_No=1052&src=pr</A>
So it took less than 8 months to get that "centuries old toned look"? >>
>>
Amazing.....Sad, but amazing
<< <i>
<< <i>So it took less than 8 months to get that "centuries old toned look"? >>
Amazing.....Sad, but amazing
Which part is sad?
Does the before or after picture look better to you?
Or the fact that it was slabbed as a problem free or net graded PCGS PR63?
Which would you rather have?
<< <i>Short session in a vibratory cartridge case cleaner... Cheers, RickO >>
What is a "vibratory cartridge case cleaner"?
Truth be told, hairlines are common on large silver coins, especially PFs. They are often the grade limiting items re PF Seated $s and PF Barber Halves. I've also seen a number of MS Trade Dollars with hairlines.
"Seu cabra da peste,
"Sou Mangueira......."
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Yes.
BUT, your pockets can all wear out b4 the scratches disappear.
If the scratches are super vague and hard to see, a couple of
years in denim pockets will certainly do the trick.
<< <i>No one listens...
What's a vibratory cartridge case cleaner?
Jerry
K S