CLEANING IKES
In this chapter we will
discuss the methods, ethics and practicalities of coin cleaning.
METHODS OF COIN CLEANING
I. “Whizzing”
and wiping - Before chemical dips,
the wire brush (hand held or on the end of a drill) was convenient to create a
shiny, new looking coin. Under a loupe,
however, the tell-tale parallel brush lines (“hair lines”) and the movement of
metal in front of the brush wires gave letters and numbers a wind-blown
appearance, a dead-certain give-away. A
whizzed coin is a worthless coin, an adulterated coin. There are many sold each day on eBay, buyer
beware. “Improperly Cleaned” is the
leading reason PCGS and other Third Party Graders reject coins. Even a gentle swipe with a cleaning cloth
can leave behind the tell-tale fine hair lines that a TPG grader will see as he
“wobbles” the coin under his grading lamp.
2. Organic
Solvent dip - Carbon-tetrachloride was the rage when the
oldest author was a kid until its lethal side effects forced a ban on its
use. Acetone, somewhat less
toxic, is the current solvent of choice although it, too, must be used with
respect as it can dissolve the fats in your cell membranes, cause liver rot and generally kill off your
cells – not good. A little splashed on your fingers will do no harm but
prolonged exposure to higher concentrations either on skin or breathing in
vapors is to be avoided. Best use it
out of doors or at least in a well ventilated room and certainly away from any
and all flames or possible sparks.
Since acetone dissolves most
plastics including plastic gloves, metal coin tongs are a must. The simplest containers for dipping or
soaking coins are broad, low glass jars with metal screw caps (no rubber
gasket) or one can use folded aluminum foil held in place with stout or
multiple rubber bands.
Note that most Q-tips have
plastic cores. You can find wood-stick
Q-tips via Google.
Acetone will dissolve oils,
grease, oily grunge, even the
green ugly stuff left behind
by PVC from the older soft plastic coin holders and flips. Greasy dirt will wash away quickly but PVC
residue may require days or weeks of soaking.
Remember that PVC residue can
etch a coin in time, especially Ni-Cu clad coins: do not expect pristine surfaces beneath the PVC gunk, especially
if it is turning from green toward black.
The good news is acetone
soaks do not harm to silver and clad coins, even with prolonged soaking. But there is no free lunch and acetone can
give exposed copper a neon-pink coloration, including the exposed copper on the
rims of clad coins. Acetone does not
disturb toning and it may wash away the peculiar “fogging” and “clouding” that
can attack Cu-Ni clad coins (even coins housed in TPG holders).
ANACS recently published a
piece on acetone cleaning, suggesting that an acetone soak is a good precaution
if there is any possibility a coin was exposed to soft plastic for any length
of time. Some coin pros routinely dip
all TPG submissions in acetone as a precaution.
TPGs generally insist that
submitted coins be in hard plastic “flips”.
While the hard plastic is free of PVC, it can scratch coins over time,
especially proofs, so many coin pros insert their proof subs into small soft
vinyl flips and then into the required larger hard flip. Over a few days or weeks this probably does
no harm. One of the authors used only
hard flips but he holds them together gently with rubber bands to prevent coin
movement within the flips.
Acetone is available at most
drug stores and hardware stores. Look
for 100% pure acetone at Home Depot, for example, or pharmaceutical grade
acetone from your drug store. Once
again, acetone, like gasoline, is highly flammable and must not be used near
flame or electric sparks. It evaporates
rapidly, very rapidly into a gaseous form which must not be allowed to
accumulate!
You will need two or three
glass jars with acetone in each for successively cleaner rinse-dips. After the final super-clean rinse-dip you
can let the coin air dry.
Your New England author
enjoys cleaning coins in the summer when it is possible to do everything out
doors or on a screened porch. When the
operation moves indoors, he uses only one jar of acetone which is kept tightly
sealed with aluminum foil and rubber bands.
Instead of a series of cleansing rinses with acetone, he uses a series
of 90% alcohol rinses and a clean cotton towel to gently wick off the alcohol
of the last rinse.
Other organic solvents - There are other candidates:
-
91% Isopropyl
Alcohol : (“first aid antiseptic”), available at all
drug stores, is perfect for removing most greasy gunk, although a Q-tip may be
necessary to gently remove clots of oily debris (remember that the coining
press dies were oiled/greased frequently so many Ikes have grease/oil
remnants. Some even show grease
strike-throughs in which portions of the coin have no design definition because
those die elements became filled with grease).
Since this alcohol is used for rub-downs, it is quite
safe
to work with and many coin pros routinely
use it as the
final rinse as it air-dries rapidly or
can safely be blown
away with a hair drier.
Do not use Isopropyl Alcohol that is
mixed with a skin
lotion ingredient! If in doubt about the purity of your
organic solvent, allow a drop or two to
dry in a mirror.
-
Gasoline is
mentioned only to put down: it is
toxic, explosive, and contains additives that leave residues.
-
“White petroleum”, better known as “Coleman’s camper
Fuel”
is an excellent non-ionic, relatively safe organic solvent that is cheap and
available at Wal-Mart’s and the like.
One author found it worked as well as acetone on early PVC residue. It evaporates slower than acetone which
makes gentle, patient Q-tip work a lot easier.
3.
Acid dip - E-Z Off and Jewel Luster are two readily available acid dips which will instantly
remove most toning from Ikes. Indeed
one simply dips an Ike using plastic coin tongs once or twice for a few seconds
and the coin will have been stripped of its tarnish. Since continued exposure to the acid will quickly begin eroding
deeper into the outermost layer of your coin, the layer that provides the
luster we prize so highly, the briefest possible dip and immediate extensive
flushing in tap water is essential, flushing for minutes rather than seconds. Then dip for a few seconds in water into
which some baking soda has been dissolved (amount not critical, half a teaspoon
in a pint is fine), and lastly dip into two rinses of distilled water or
isopropyl alcohol before drying the coin with a soft lint-free cotton towel or
hair drier.
If your coin room is more than a few degrees
on either side of 70, the dipping time will change: for example, a swing of around 15 degrees F will double or half
the time required. Thus an 80 degree
dip will work twice as fast as a 65 degree dip.
Over-acid-dipped
Ikes look dull and lifeless: Proofs
should be dipped for no more than a second or two, BS Ike for no more than five
to 15 seconds.
If
you’re working with Proof coins, be very careful handling the coins and use a hair
drier for drying. Experience is the
best teacher so experiment with previously abused proofs!
E-Z
Off is an acid solution of thio-urea and detergent so if you rinse a dipped
coin in a plastic basin you will see soapy frothing for about 20 seconds: continue rinsing well beyond that
point. Follow the detailed rinsing
instructions given below.
4.
MS-70 - Useful
stuff at times, especially for Ikes. It
is as harshly alkaline as the acid dips are acidic and it also contains strong
detergents. Use it full strength or
diluted 50-50 with water and apply with a Q-tip, gently swabbing or rolling the
Q-tip over the surface of the coin (rapid is OK but no pressure): avoid scrubbing as even soft cotton with
rubbing pressure can leave hairlines that are death for a fine coin.
Working
with a Q-Tip gives you total control of the process and it’s actually a lot of
fun to see the tarnish vanish instantly.
The fun part will help you sustain the experimentation necessary to get
a handle on which Ikes benefit from “cleaning” and which do not as well as
leading you to the methods that work best for you.
As
with acid dip, the toning vanishes instantly in most cases and a thorough rinse
is the next, immediate and most important step. If you are not doing wholesale cleaning, it is safe to work with
bare fingers, holding the coin by the rim and moving your fingers enough so you
get MS-70 over all the surfaces including the rim. For the rinse, instead of holding each coin under running water
for 10 or 15 minutes, use a plasticized wire silverware bin, the size used in
kitchen drawers. Place the bin in a
slightly larger solid plastic silverware bin and fill it half-way with
water. Place this at your water-proof,
well-ventilated and dust-free work station so you can gently lay the coin in
the basked under water as soon as it looks clean, usually as soon as your Q-Tip
has rotated over all three surfaces.
When
you have done a few coins, or when the bottom of the basket has one layer of
separated coins, place it under fast running tap water for at least ten minutes.
It takes a long time for the detergent to rinse off.
Then,
lift out the wire basked and dump the tap water out the solid plastic bin. Thoroughly rinse the plastic bin, replace
wire bin with the coins and pour distilled water over the coins until the bin
is half full – then dip the wire bin in and out of the distilled water. Dump and repeat. You now have thoroughly rinsed coins dripping wet with distilled
water.
To
dry the coins you have several choices.
Some use a hair drier which blows most of the water off the coin and
evaporates the rest. Others use a 90%
rubbing alcohol dip, pouring just enough into the plastic bin to cover the
coins: dip the coins in and out of the
alcohol followed by forced hot air drying (hair drier) or wick-dry with a clean
lint-free cotton cloth to remove most of the alcohol prior to air-drying.
To
insure thoroughly dry coins one can hold each in the stream of hot air from a
hair drier or gently layer them on “Jewel Cloth” and gently warm them with a
light bulb for a few minutes.
You’ll
develop your own techniques. One of the
author’s tap water has high iron content which can create delayed blue
toning: he uses hot distilled water to
rinse his MS-70 treated coins as hot water greatly shortens the rinse time Just use common sense, experiment, and have
fun.
The
photographs show the approach used by one of the authors.
OF ETHICS,
CUSTODIAL RESPONSIBILITY, TPGs and NCS
“JUST SAY ‘NO’ TO DIPPING” - Some purists howl at the mere thought of tampering
with a coin, but these people are rarely modern coin enthusiasts. Tarnish on older silver coins often has a
deeper foothold on the coin and its removal can leave a coin luster-less, dull
and “cleaned” looking, even though the surface will appear bright to casual
inspection.
Purists
argue correctly that old coins are what they are, and tampering with them is a
violation of trust, a violation of our responsibility to pass along historic
coins without adulteration.
Coin
entrepreneurs, on the other hand, can make a living by buying heavily toned
classic coins and cleaning them to a “BLAZING WHITE!!!” (if you’re self
possessed enough to linger in a men’s room at a coin show for an hour, you will
probably see a dealer or two hurriedly clean some coins right then and there in
quest of a significant profit upon re-sale).
Most
collectors in the early stages of collecting (and some for the duration) prefer
white coins: nothing wrong with such a
personal preference but once a classic coin has been stripped of its tarnish,
it has often been stripped of its history, its essence, and sometimes of a
significant amount of its original surface metal including some or all the
die-flow lines that create lustrous cart-wheeling, the single most important
factor that brings a coin to life and gives it eye-appeal.
DIPPING IKES - Cleaning Ikes
and other moderns is a different story.
The ugly dirty toning that is so common on Ikes of all grades is easily
and safely dipped off, and if done with the minimal amount of chemical, the
luster of the underlying surfaces is not impaired. A properly rinsed and subsequently protected Ike will regain and
retain its smashing new-coin look.
A
dipped Ike with fresh metal surfaces will tone more quickly than an original
Ike that already has some toning, and since such re-toning is unpredictable and
likely to be ugly, protect any dipped coin just as you would protect an
original blazing white Ike you got from the middle of a pristine roll. Seal the coin from exposure to moisture and
the trace oxidants present in household air by storing it in a flip. Store flips in boxes (and TPG slabs in their
boxes) in a small space with inexpensive little boxes of silica gel (these
absorb moisture and can be recharged by drying in an oven at 250 degrees for
several hours). It is amazing how
rapidly an absolutely fresh blazing white Ike removed from a roll will begin to
dull if just left out in the open when humidity is high: in a month or two you might not recognize
the coin.
We
emphasize that moisture is the main enemy of coins in storage. If you store your coins in a safe, be sure
to include one or two little boxes of “silica gel”.
“Intercept
Shield” products and the like provide additional protection if you live in a
place that has more than its share of atmospheric pollution or if you just
don’t want to take a chance.
Be
aware that early generation fire-proof safes used a lining material that
retains moisture to stay wet: the
interiors of these safes typically have high humidity and can be a disaster for
coin storage.
ETHICS AND REAL WORLD EXAMPLES - There are several situations when it seems more
ethical to clean a coin than to leave it alone, especially in the sense that we
are custodians of the coins we own. The
PVC “green-black grunge” residue mentioned earlier that acetone can remove is a
good example. Without removal, this
residue will gradually eat into the surface of an afflicted coin and destroy
it. An acetone soaking may save the
coin.
Another
example is the “fogged” (“clouded”) Ike, a condition where the coin develops a
dense white fog, typically over the central device on one or both
surfaces. By the way, this can occur in
holdered Ikes and thus may be due to residual surface contamination that
continues to fester even in a holder.
The authors are suspicious that inadequate rinsing after dipping may be
one cause of fogging. In any event, it
seems to be more prevalent in humid climates, seriously!
Fog
can sometimes be removed with an acetone soak.
Holdered fogged coins obviously would have to be cracked out for
treatment: getting them back into a
holder at the same grade is always problematic. The best TPG’s stand behind their products and will either clean
and re-holder a coin that fogs in their holder or buy it back from you.
An
important option for cleaning any coin is NCS, NGC’s professional conservation
service and the only such service currently available. They employ a variety of proprietary coin
cleaning and dipping techniques: the
results can be dramatic but sometimes less than desirable. It is always a gamble to clean a coin,
any coin.
For
the authors, dipping an Ike made ugly with dirty-looking toning is an act of
preservation, an act of kindness, comparable to cleaning a lovely painting that
has become cloudy with cumulated dust and dirt. All of us, however, have gradually become more comfortable with
“original skin” toned Ikes in their natural state and less drawn to “BLAST
WHITE!!!” Ikes.
When
considering the purchase of a “BLAST WHITE!!!” Ike remember that it may have
been dipped: if dipped and not rinsed
properly it is vulnerable to unpredictable re-toning (which can get ugly) or
fogging.
If
you like blast white Ikes, it is not a bad idea to experiment by purposefully
“over-dipping” and multiply dipping some Ikes with no premium value to learn
first hand how to avoid similarly treated Ikes.
Will TPGs Holder Cleaned coins?
Top
tier TPGs will reject any coin that has had metal physically moved or removed
in the cleaning process. This includes
whiz lines, “hair-lines” and certainly any “wind-blown” effect and more extreme
examples of over-dipped coins. They
will holder properly dipped coins. If a
given dirty-toned Ike is unusually free of hits and planchet defects, dipping
can even increase the chance of a higher grade. PCGS, for example, seems to down-grade Ikes with toning, even
pretty toning if that toning could be hiding luster breaks or small hits. (Shady coin doctors will artificially tone
coins to try to hide small areas of luster break, hair-lines and small hits,
buyer beware.)
DIPPING WILL
NOT IMPROVE A LOW GRADE IKE!!
Dipping a low-grade MS Ike makes the hits more obvious
and uglier. This can not be over-emphasized. Dipping a circulated Ike will NOT make it
look uncirculated. Dipping an Ike will
NOT improve its appearance unless it has strong lustrous surfaces and minimal
hits under its veil of grunge and tarnish.
Test
this yourself on cheap and circulated dirty, grungy and toned AU Ikes before
even thinking of dipping a better Ike:
you’ll be glad you did.