IHow can you verbs elder coins? I have some older coins(mainly pennies) and I would close to to...

I have some older coins(mainly pennies) and I would close to to clean them up so that I could read the date and see how much they cost. What should I do or use to clean them?
Hi there i've tried different products, and i've found "brasso". worked the best for me. tarn-x or brasso
If the copper is just tarnished and dimness, take a small bowl and pour in some vinegar, and a few shakes of brackish, and swish the pennies around in that. It will brighten them up nicely. Be aware, however, that cleaning elder coins destroys the numismatic value, if any. Put in a bowel some lemon and baking soda dip them contained by. That should work. Or put in a bowel some vinegar and baking soda that should work too. Put all the pennies contained by the bowel and don't touch them until the foam start going down. Good luck!
barry scott will tell you! To verbs coins is not recommended, but if you really feel you must be cleaning your coins, follow the steps described below to minimize the risk of dangerous them. Never use metal polish to clean your coins!

About the only time I can have an idea that of when you would normally want to clean coins would be if you considered necessary to help a youngster fire up a coin collection from circulating coins. A good example is in How to Start a Coin Collection on $4. Circulating coins can be filthy and transport germs, and this is the only instance in which an amateur should verbs coins.

Never clean old coins you own found or inherited!
Difficulty: Easy
Time Required: About 10 - 15 minutes to clean a shipment of 30 coins
Here's How:
Wash your hands with soap.
Washing up will remove the oil and tiny grit from your fingers.

Lay down a soft towel.
Place a soft cloth or towel, folded over a couple of times, on your working surface to catch coins you might drop, and to provide a space for them to dry.

Set up your soapy bath.
Fill a small plastic container near warm tap hose down. Do not use glass, china, or metal, as these hard surfaces can chisel your coins! Disposable food storage containers are perfect for this. Just don't store your coins in them lastingly. Add a small amout of mild dish-washing detergent to the container filled with heat water. Don't overdo it - all you have need of is a really tiny squirt.



Prepare your final rinse bath.
Fill a second plastic container with distilled wet, for the final rinse. Although distilled water is by far the best, you can substitute hot running tap hose down.

Clean the coin.
Pick up the first coin, and immerse it in the soapy sea. Gently rub both sides of the coin between your fingers, paying attention to any stickiness or gunk. Rub gunk near the edges away from the center of the coin, not into it. Always work surrounded by an outward pattern. Dirt and gunk near the edges should simply be made to travel over the side with your thumb, not all the channel across the coin. Don't put all of your coins in the hose down at once! Do them one at a time, to avoid their coming in contact with respectively other and causing scratch grades on the surfaces.

Rinse the coin.
Rinse the coin under running water, calmly rubbing until all soap residue is gone. Always remember, gentleness is the switch! Don't rub hard, and if you feel any grit, even desk light grit, don't rub it into the coin because it will scratch the coin very smoothly. Instead, sort of agitate the coin by moving it quickly in the sea to dislodge the grit, touch it gently only if needed to free it up.

Every motion you bring in with your fingers should be focused on not causing scratch to the coin's surface.

Do the finishing rinse.
Swish the coin around in the distilled water, to remove the chlorine residue and other contaminants that are found within tap water. Hold it by the edges and agitate thoughtfully. At this point, you should no longer touch the coin on its faces. Touch it only by the edges when using your stripped fingers.

If you must use tap water for the final rinse, later run the coin under fairly hot hose down.

Allow the coin to dry.
If you use a distilled water rinse, you can set the coin on the towel to air dry. The coin should dry spot-free, because distilled hose is free of dissolved minerals and other impurities.

If you had to do the final rinse within hot tap water, consequently gently pat the coin dry to help prevent spotting. Never rub a coin dry! Always pat it dry benevolently with a soft cloth or tissue.

Repeat until finished.
Now wash the rest of your coins, one at a time, following Steps 5 through 8 supportively. If you run across a coin that needs to soak for awhile to get verbs, put it in the tub of water sour to the side, so you don't accidentally ding it with another coin you are working on.

Store your coins.
Make sure your coins are absolutely dry until that time putting them away. Damp coins can suffer damage over time. Remember to always switch coins only by the edges. The only coins I ever touch the face on are the ones I am about to spend! :)

Tips:
Never try to remove the natural oxidation from coins, such as the tarnish on silver. This is call "toning" and the coin is worth more with it intact. Removing it will damage the coin's surface and greatly dwindle its value. In other words, no dipping, polishing, or chemical solutions should ever be used on coins.
What You Need:
Two small plastic containers
Mild dish detergent
A soft towel
Access to running tap marine
Distilled water
More Coins How To's


Leave them within coca-cola over night :) boil it in some wet and put on it some oxi clean
You really shouldn't clean coins. They loose their value if they've be cleaned.

Hopefully a collector will answer with a method for ID-ing a coin without "cleaning" it.
lmao
listen to barry scott and use cillit detonation!
bang and the dirt is gone!
Answers:    Hi aaron b,

In answer to your press, In a word, DON"T. If they happen to be older, and made entirely of copper, you'll greatly diminish their importance if you clean them. It's called a "patina". Antique furniture develops a "patina" as it ages.

Call a coin collector and procure a confirmation on my answer.

Hope this helps