Cleaning Old Black Nickles

AmericanCoinHunting

Bronze Member
Apr 23, 2005
1,062
6
CHICAGO
Detector(s) used
E-Trac w/Pro Coil,and 6x8" S.E.F,The Relic & Gold hunters DREAM...a Troy X-3 w/3 coils
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
I have been cleaning some nasty wheaties that hydrogen Peroxide could not touch..........
I tried vinager on them,and the dirt came off,along with the color,,,,,,,,,Turned them pail.................
I posted a pick of a 1940 Nickle find...I think on January 3rd ?.....That was just black........
...............Hardly showed up in the pics........................I thought.................
Well .......If Apple Cider Vinager will turn Wheat cents pail....................................
I wonder if it will work on Black Nickles as well.....................After soaking for 20 minutes,and scrubbing with baking soda,and repeat 3 more times................Here are the results....In the Before Pic..The 1940 Nickle is in the upper right corner of the original Jan_3rd pic
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
...

_______________________________BEFORE_______
1_3_09_finds.jpg







__________________________AFTER___________________________________________________
Cleaned_1940_Nickle_1_11_09.jpg

:thumbsup: :thumbsup: :thumbsup: :thumbsup: :thumbsup: :thumbsup: :thumbsup: :thumbsup: :thumbsup:
 

Cool, I only cleaned 1 nickel ever - sadly it was my very first Buffalo... I wish I didn't. I like them the way they look right out of the ground, now I just rinse them off with hot water to get the dirt off.

I used white vinegar with some salt. It stripped the oxidation right off, but left it a dull grey color. Man I wish I didn't clean it!!!! >:(
 

Looks like it gave it a pitted surface but if it's not super rare so be it because it is easier to look at!
 

A few minutes ago I was putting the nickle away,and looked at the back...........I discovered it is a 1940........with an (( S )) .....mm...........
Is that any more rare than a D or P Nickle ???.............I can't seem to find my books in all this cluttered mess........while cleaning My dirty 2008 finds....................... YES Lowbatts..........It IS pitted//////////////////But it was nasty,and pitted and Black before I soaked it in cider...........
........................................Hmmmmmmmmmmmmm...................."soaked it in cider "..............T h a t.... even sounds nasty...LOL
 

I looked on the PCGS website, it is common. Actually the 1940p has a higher cost.
 

TreasureFiend said:
I looked on the PCGS website, it is common. Actually the 1940p has a higher cost.
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Lowbatts said:
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Thanks for the info Guys..............I kind of like the way the cleaned up nickle looks better than the way it looked before.............Tho.....................If it had been a rare one..................I think I would have left it alone.........Thanks Again
 

Hi McEtrac,
If you want to clean your nickels & don't like the smell of vinegar, you can use Lea & Perrins Worcestershire sauce. It does the same thing over a bit more time, but it smells like you're going to cook a steak. ;D

That's a gorgeous Merc, BTW!!
 

kimsdad said:
Hi McEtrac,
If you want to clean your nickels & don't like the smell of vinegar, you can use Lea & Perrins Worcestershire sauce. It does the same thing over a bit more time, but it smells like you're going to cook a steak. ;D

That's a gorgeous Merc, BTW!!
Thanks kimsdad..................I do not like the smell of vinegar,and will try that
 

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top