![]() ![]() ![]() If you could find someone with a furnace that has good enough control you can melt it off, I'm guessing that the CuNi is alloyed, that should hopefully give you a leeway of about 100☌. Hobbyist - Winchester, California, United States of AmericaĪ. This "Ike" is of the Type II Variety, for those fellow numismatists out there wondering why I would want bother with removing the gold layering. ⇩ Closely related postings, oldest first ⇩Ĭan anyone tell me if there is a safe and thorough means of removing gold from a coin? I have two 1972 Eisenhower Copper-nickel clad dollar coins that have been dipped in gold, and I would like to know if the gold can be removed without altering the grade/appearance of the coins original surface. That youtube video sounds fine, but if you want 2nd, 3rd, 4th opinions, etc., please review this thread or our others about stripping gold including thread 0451, thread 14022, and thread 7715. We moved your posting from the "Stripping Silver" thread to one of our several threads about stripping gold - the chemistries are really not that similar that we would want to homogenize them. ![]()
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