Its acidic nature,lol!!
that makes about 0 sense.
Yes, one can buy coin supplies at non-retail coin stores like Target or Walmart. One can also use the online stores of Target or Walmart to buy coin supplies.
Yes, u can play coin dozer on facebook.
The part speech that a coin is a noun. A noun is a person, place, or thing. A coin is a thing.
There is no way to do that
perhaps many drops of juices ca also clean an old fashioned penny or dirty coin
Generally the juice which is the most acidic would clean coins better.Lime juice is about as acidic as you'll find in a home kitchen. It has a pH of about 1.80 to 2.35 . Lemon Juice is also very acidic (2.00 to 2.60).However, there's a standard caution about trying to clean coins. If a coin has ANY collector value, home cleaning will do enough damage to the coin's surface that it will be worth less than if it had been left alone.If you have common circulation coins that are only worth face value, feel free to play around with different cleaners. But remember that if you get an old silver coin, or something like a 1909-S cent, even common household chemicals will affect the coin's surface and do a real number on its sale price.
lemon juice will clean a coin great. But don't use it if the coin is valuable or collectible, that will lower the value. hope this helps. Brian
Both soda and orange juice are acidic, but the carbination in most sodas make it more acidic than the mildly-acidic citric acid in orange juice.
It's meant to clean a coin. Some apples are slightly acidic which makes the juice slightly acidic. The acid is supposed to clean the coin. Most exerts recommend you don't clean any coins that have collector value. Instead of raising the value it often times lowers it. If you just want to practice or see what happens you can easily just take a dirty penny an put it and see what happens.
Lemon juice is known to clean coins well. However, if you are a coin collector, do not clean your coins. You might think this will increase the value but it actually destroy the value.Lemon juice cleans a penny fast due to its acidity. Use the link below to find out how to clean your pennies.
Cause it's gay .
step 1:have cups for the juicestep 2:pour the juice in the cups, pour juice half waystep 3:drop in pennies that are dirtystep 4:leave pennies for a while like 20-30 minutes to let chemicals come togetherstep 5:take out the pennies and compare them to see which is cleanerstep 6:you have completed the procedure
Vinegar has a pH level of 3.0, while lemon juice has a pH level of 2.3. This means that lemon juice is a slightly stronger acid than vinegar. The stronger the acid, the better it will clean.
Coke cleans a penny better than lemon juice because coke has a lot more chemicals than lemon juice.HOWEVER ...You should only clean ordinary coins that have no collector value. Anything you use to try to shine or otherwise "spiff up" a collectible coin will damage its surface and reduce its value to coin collectors.
Please post a new question with the spelling corrected, so that it can be found in a search. DOES, not "dose" AFFECT, not "efect" MUCH, not "mouch"
Bleach will not clean a penny well at all - in fact, it will cause a reaction between the copper of the coin and the chlorine in the bleach. The oxidation will turn the majority of the penny black whilst also producing a green and white paste comprised of mainly copper hydroxides and also maybe some zinc hydroxide.Unless you have a common circulation coin or a junk coin without a date, using any household chemicals, juice, soda, erasers, etc. will destroy its collector value.