mckeekitty
Greenie
- #1
Thread Owner
Hi Folks,
Regarding dirty clad: I looked into tumblers. I looked into various cleaning solutions. I tried baking soda, vinegar, and metal cleaners. I realized I was spending more time and energy trying to get a quarter to look presentable than I did digging for it!
I never wanted to use a coin machine. I worked too damn hard for each and every one of those coins, and wasn't willing to give a cent to a machine so it could profit from my efforts. Finally, I called my local bank (I'm in Western, MA).
I explained my dilemma: My hobby was metal detecting and I had collected a few hundred dollars worth of change over the years, and the coins were filthy and unworthy of circulation.
My call was transferred to the Head Teller. I was asked to roll the coins and mark the rolls "dirty." I cash them in, and the bank then sends the coins to the FED (and I'm speculating here, but probably taken out of circulation). Anyway, I've done this about half a dozen times and no problem! The bank only asks that I don't mix clean coins with dirty ones...they don't want to be sending perfectly good coins off with the filthy ones.
Anyway, this has been my experience. I don't know if they are doing me a favor (I doubt it...we never have more than $10.00 in our account on any given day!) or if there is a Federal policy in place for accepting coins in poor condition...currency is currency afterall. Worth a phone call to your bank!
Anyway,
Regarding dirty clad: I looked into tumblers. I looked into various cleaning solutions. I tried baking soda, vinegar, and metal cleaners. I realized I was spending more time and energy trying to get a quarter to look presentable than I did digging for it!
I never wanted to use a coin machine. I worked too damn hard for each and every one of those coins, and wasn't willing to give a cent to a machine so it could profit from my efforts. Finally, I called my local bank (I'm in Western, MA).
I explained my dilemma: My hobby was metal detecting and I had collected a few hundred dollars worth of change over the years, and the coins were filthy and unworthy of circulation.
My call was transferred to the Head Teller. I was asked to roll the coins and mark the rolls "dirty." I cash them in, and the bank then sends the coins to the FED (and I'm speculating here, but probably taken out of circulation). Anyway, I've done this about half a dozen times and no problem! The bank only asks that I don't mix clean coins with dirty ones...they don't want to be sending perfectly good coins off with the filthy ones.
Anyway, this has been my experience. I don't know if they are doing me a favor (I doubt it...we never have more than $10.00 in our account on any given day!) or if there is a Federal policy in place for accepting coins in poor condition...currency is currency afterall. Worth a phone call to your bank!
Anyway,