The answer is you don't clean your coins. Cleaning coins is detrimental to the value. Unless they are caked in dirt don't clean them, if they are caked in dirt, clean with soapy water and a towel or sponge and dry.
Soda
Do not attempt to clean old coins. Anything you have at home will damage the coins' surface and significantly reduce its value!
There are several ways. You can get a silver cleaning cloth or a liquid silver cleaner where you dip the silver into and then wipe it clean.
The answer is DON'T clean any coins because this will almost always decrease their value. Go over it slightly with a damp cotton towel will usually not hurt its value but don't ever really clean a coin.
So toothpaste might clean silver but who noez i dnt <SHLASH>
Flowing Hair, Draped Bust, and Gobrecht silver dollars contain .8924 oz. Pure silver. Trade dollars contain .7874 oz. pure silver Liberty Seated , Morgan and Peace dollars contain .77344 oz. pure silver. Eisenhower silver dollars contain .3161 oz pure silver . American Silver Eagles contain a full oz. pure silver
The answer is you don't clean your coins. Cleaning coins is detrimental to the value. Unless they are caked in dirt don't clean them, if they are caked in dirt, clean with soapy water and a towel or sponge and dry.
Do not attempt to clean old coins. Anything you have at home will damage the coins' surface and significantly reduce its value!
tom has 39 silver dollars
The last true silver dollars were made in 1935. That year marked the end of 90% silver dollars. The next silver dollars were made in 1971. These were Eisenhower dollars. They are not made of silver but rather of copper and nickel.
No, you do not clean coins. Cleaning coins will only damage their value. If you feel you must clean a coin, take it to a coin dealer and see what he recommends to clean the coin, however, they will recommend you not to clean it. Coins potentially worth hundreds of dollars have been brought down to selling them for scrap because people have cleaned them! Do not clean coins!
All silver dollars made of silver contain 90% silver, but the last of those was minted in 1935. The Eisenhower dollars of the 1970s didn't contain silver.
There are several ways. You can get a silver cleaning cloth or a liquid silver cleaner where you dip the silver into and then wipe it clean.
39
The answer is DON'T clean any coins because this will almost always decrease their value. Go over it slightly with a damp cotton towel will usually not hurt its value but don't ever really clean a coin.
Half dollars minted before 1965 are 90% silver, and those from 1965-70 are 40% silver. Then with silver dollars, the last year for ones with actual silver in them was 1935 (there were no dollar coins from 1936 to 1970).
Silver Dollars were minted starting in 1794. There were no silver dollars minted in 1791
No silver dollars were minted in 1969 in the United States. The only coins still minted in silver at time were Kennedy half dollars with 40% silver content.