[ Figure 1:1 ]
Requirements
1 Pin
Coins
Some olive oil
Purified Water
Containers
Lots of time and patience
Magnifying glass
Good lighting source [ Natural light works best ]
Towels
Brushes
Notes before reading
Please read the sections below first before a cleaning attempt is started:
Bronze Disease
I have doubts about cleaning. I may damage it.
Method
Method
1] Place coins on a flat surface with good lighting. I prefer natural light.
2] Sort out coins, which ones already look good enough. Not all coins need cleaning. Some of them already are in a VF [ Very Fine ] condition. But below the dirt, there are many damages and flaws, rust, corrosion,no patina and so …show more content…
It eats the metal of the coins until there is a hole through it. The green powder covers up the hole, or damage it is causing until it is too late. For uncleaned coins, it usually starts to spread when in contact with any liquid.
Bronze Disease [ Part 2 ]
When receiving uncleaned coins, isolate the ones with the Bronze Disease. It can spread into your collection. Do not put them in contact with any liquid substance, oil, water, and so on.
If you are a new collector, I recommend just isolating it, visit your expert. Scraping it off helps if the item is dry, but if it starts growing when it gets in contact with water that is a problem.
If it already is spreading, or that you are a professional, I advise that you remove it as fast as possible. In two days, it ate through the patina of one of my coins, leave it for a week.
To get rid of it, well, it is quite complicated. Olive oil seems to slow it down, but not much effect on it. Purified water usually cures it, but it may also strip the coin of all its patina.
My best advice, make sure that you do not place the coin into any contact with any liquid substance. If it already is infected, cure it as fast as possible. Consult an expert as fast as