Green Frost
Full Member
- Oct 9, 2005
- 137
- 16
Well proxide clean coins
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StickShift said:I have tried peroxide to clean coins also, and it didn't seem to help.
The hot water in a coffee cup, with a piece of tin foil on bottom add and disolved a Table spoon of salt. It cleaned copper coins for me. I tried a clad dime in the same solution and
one it cleaned very well and another it turned it a slight reddish tint, Possibly the copper
in it may have been the cause......... I would never clean a valuable coin with this method........
As far as Red Devil lye I have never tried it on coins, so I can't say myself if it is safe or not.
But my parents use to make Lye soap, using Red Devil lye and lard, heated in a large iron pot.
I don't remember if they would add anything else to it, but don't believe they did.
We used the lye soap to clean tobacco tar off our hands when farming tobacco, and even
used it for washing clothes.
I don't know the reason it didn't burn our hands but it never did.
Probably the grease (lard) that was used in making the soap neutralized the acid and
was weakened by the ratio of high concentration of the lard.
I would never clean a valuable coin with lye either. It's best not to clean valuable coins.
HH
SS
Neil in West Jersey said:Don's advice is GOOD advice. I have used it on large copper and even those "unidentifiable" wheaties. It works great!
Ant said:Neil in West Jersey said:Don's advice is GOOD advice. I have used it on large copper and even those "unidentifiable" wheaties. It works great!
Those coins look very pitted too me. If they had any value when you started, they don't now.
HH