Coin cleaning suggestions?

dirtdigger1581

Hero Member
Jun 18, 2011
591
270
Chesapeake, VA
Detector(s) used
Minelab E-trac, Minelab Excalibur II 1000, Garrett AT Pro, Teknetics T2
Primary Interest:
Metal Detecting
I want to know what your preferred methods are for cleaning the stubborn dirt from coins. I've dug a lot of Indian head pennies this year that are caked with dirt and just won't come off with soap and warm water. What methods are any of you using for cleaning coins of the caked on dirt? Silver coins seem to clean up nicely, but what's the trick to the copper coins??? Any suggestions?

Thanks and Happy Hunting!

-Nate
 

Mac232

Hero Member
Aug 18, 2007
674
26
Greasy Creek , TN
Detector(s) used
XP Deus
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Try putting a little peroxide in a bowl and nuking it for around a minute or so , depending on how much you use , and drop the copper coins in ........ it will " boil " the excess dirt and grime off .
 

treasurehound

Bronze Member
Jan 23, 2008
1,500
376
Morristown, Tennessee
🥇 Banner finds
1
Detector(s) used
Minelab GPX 4500,
Minelab Equinox 800,
Garrett AT GOLD with NEL coil,
Garrett Sea Hunter
Primary Interest:
Relic Hunting
Mac232 said:
Try putting a little peroxide in a bowl and nuking it for around a minute or so , depending on how much you use , and drop the copper coins in ........ it will " boil " the excess dirt and grime off .

That's how I do my IH's.
 

OP
OP
dirtdigger1581

dirtdigger1581

Hero Member
Jun 18, 2011
591
270
Chesapeake, VA
Detector(s) used
Minelab E-trac, Minelab Excalibur II 1000, Garrett AT Pro, Teknetics T2
Primary Interest:
Metal Detecting
treasurehound said:
Mac232 said:
Try putting a little peroxide in a bowl and nuking it for around a minute or so , depending on how much you use , and drop the copper coins in ........ it will " boil " the excess dirt and grime off .

That's how I do my IH's.

I've tried this before without much success. I've seen it work for others, but for some reason it won't peel the dirt off for me. I'll give it another shot though.
 

treasurehound

Bronze Member
Jan 23, 2008
1,500
376
Morristown, Tennessee
🥇 Banner finds
1
Detector(s) used
Minelab GPX 4500,
Minelab Equinox 800,
Garrett AT GOLD with NEL coil,
Garrett Sea Hunter
Primary Interest:
Relic Hunting
dirtdigger1581 said:
treasurehound said:
Mac232 said:
Try putting a little peroxide in a bowl and nuking it for around a minute or so , depending on how much you use , and drop the copper coins in ........ it will " boil " the excess dirt and grime off .

That's how I do my IH's.

I've tried this before without much success. I've seen it work for others, but for some reason it won't peel the dirt off for me. I'll give it another shot though.

The hydrogen proxide needs to be boiling. It won't work otherwise. But it should take some of the crud off. Works well for me.
 

Monty

Gold Member
Jan 26, 2005
10,746
166
Sand Springs, OK
Detector(s) used
ACE 250, Garrett
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Salt and white vinegar soak will do it but leaves a frosty look on coins. I do it on clad coins but never on an older coin. Monty
 

limegoldconvertible68

Full Member
Mar 18, 2009
228
14
Illiniois
Detector(s) used
Fisher F70 with 11"DD coil, CZ-21 with 10" coil, Fisher 1265X
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
I have tried and tried the boiling peroxide method and it hasn't worked once for me either. Unless my wheat is a good date it just goes into the tumbler and I roll it in with the rest of my pennies.
 

snowdogg70

Full Member
Jun 23, 2011
236
224
burlington ontario
🏆 Honorable Mentions:
1
Detector(s) used
2 bounty hunter 2200's garrett at pro 2 garrett pro pointers
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
there are quite a few different methods to cleaning dirty coins doing a google search for cleaning ancient roman coins you should find some info.
if it is a coin you really dont want to damage the coin the safest (also the slowest) would be distilled water , place the coins in a cup with the water for 3 days then change water an do again until finished. the theory is the water has had the minerals removed from it so it is starving for minerals and that is what is stuck to the coin ,so the water slowly eats it off , but you must use new water every few days as the water absorbs the minerals it will become saturated and no longer need the minerals. this method does work very well but does take a long time
if you want to blast the crudd off then try electrolisis but be warned this can damage a rare coin , it usualy darkens the patina.
i use a 9v adapter that plugs in the wall and connect alligator clips to each wire i then get a bowl of salt water (the amount of salt will have an impact on the process ) and a piece of stainless steel .
attach 1 clip to the coin and one to the stainless put the coin in the salt water and insert half of your stainless(spoon fork etc.) into the salt water about an inch from the coin making sure this clip is attached to the spoon above water ,if the coin is fizzing then you have the + and - wires hooked up right if the stainless is fizzing then switch the wires! your stainless will get severly pitted with this method so use scrap , i shear strips at work about the 1 inch x 4 x 1/16 . in no time this will get most dirt off anything but may harm whatever your are trying to clean!
there are many other methods out there , olive oil soak, glue gun the coin dry and peel (does sometimes work real well) rapid freeze to heat ( coin expands at different rate then dirt thus cracking dirt) and so on but the 2 above i use and have worked for me
 

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Top