how do you guys clean your wheaties after you dig them?

goldentruth

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Nov 3, 2011
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French Gulch, North Calif.
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Water with dishwashing detergent, soak overnight.
(Note: see my comment on "Cleaning coins properly" Post.)
 

fistfulladirt

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Feb 21, 2008
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The common date wheats get tumbled in aquarium gravel and a spot of dish soap, for half an hour or less. Common dates are valued at 2-4 cents each.
 

Jason in Enid

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Oct 10, 2009
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Aquarium gravel in a tumbler. They're just copper pennies and have very little value above melt.
 

Goes4ever

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Jan 30, 2008
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I USED to clean wheats, until I found out they are literally everywhere. I get tired of digging them, to me they are merely a sign that silver is near. I sell all of mine on ebay, I leave the dirt on them, sell em as metal detector finds. I average 6 to 8 cents each for them on ebay
 

sniffer

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Dec 31, 2006
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Kansas
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I knock the surface stuff off, check the date and then throw them in a container with the others. if it's a key date I clean it with a little water and dish soap. that's it
 

kayden

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Apr 24, 2011
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Baking soda boiling water
 

goldentruth

Hero Member
Nov 3, 2011
523
38
French Gulch, North Calif.
Detector(s) used
"WHITES" GOLDMASTER "GMT" & "TESORO GOLDEN SABRE II" with silent search.
Primary Interest:
Metal Detecting
Also some people just brush the dust off to show the original earth and keep the value on a rare coin! ::)
 

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cmalo1985

cmalo1985

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Dec 26, 2011
29
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centereach, long island
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garretts ace 250
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thank you guys for all your advice i appreciate it greatly im new to the hobby just got my ace 250 on christmas so ive been very excited been searching my yard and got alot of copper pennies and 2 wheaties one of the wheaties are from 1929 but no silver :( lol but its getting real cold here in ny so might have to stop till the weather gets nicer lol
 

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cmalo1985

cmalo1985

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Dec 26, 2011
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0
centereach, long island
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garretts ace 250
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kayden said:
Baking soda boiling water
this is the way i did it and worked great worked way better then boiling peroxide. is this method safe to use with all coins? ? or do you recomend not too? thanks for all the help
 

fistfulladirt

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Feb 21, 2008
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cmalo1985 said:
kayden said:
Baking soda boiling water
this is the way i did it and worked great worked way better then boiling peroxide. is this method safe to use with all coins? ? or do you recomend not too? thanks for all the help
Baking soda is a mild abrasive. Every now and then I take a dug silver rosie or merc and a little baking soda in a paste between 2 fingers and grind away. May have to try the soda/boiling water on the wheats, as the peroxide method tends to darken my IH cents that I've dug.
 

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