what happens to silver in VINEGAR???

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  • čas přidán 25. 10. 2018
  • What happens when you soak silver in vinegar? I’ve heard of a lot of people using vinegar to clean silver, but I couldn’t find a lot of videos or information online. So I decided to just go ahead and try it and see if it would clean the corrosion from some old junk silver coins. I was surprised with the result.
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    Instead of removing the oxidation, it aggressively oxidized the silver. There are other methods to clean silver, for instance, baking soda, hot water, and aluminum foil. I was surprised that this message did not work as well as I thought it would. I found the best way to clean silver was toothpaste and a toothbrush. Amazing how you can start off thinking you have the best method and through experimentation find something completely different. Hope you find this video useful.
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Komentáře • 269

  • @roryross3878
    @roryross3878 Před 3 lety +40

    Thanks for the vinegar test. Recognize that any scrubbing like the toothpaste or even scrubbing with baking soda will create micro-scratches that will damage the coin.

    • @roryross3878
      @roryross3878 Před 3 lety +1

      @@PlaywithDaisy So sorry to hear that! thanks for sharing though!

    • @fareshajjar1208
      @fareshajjar1208 Před měsícem

      Any kind of cleaning makes coins far less valuable. No collector wants a coin that has been cleaned.

  • @nenagonzales8790
    @nenagonzales8790 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Videos like this one should be the very first one you see anywhere! Thank you for your video......although it would have saved me time and money in the past.😢

  • @DirtyPlumbus
    @DirtyPlumbus Před 4 lety +16

    It did exactly what I expected, just took longer then I expected. Thanks for the verification. I'm off to tone down the finish on some silver jewelry.

  • @matthewmiller5288
    @matthewmiller5288 Před 3 lety +7

    Kudos on a video that is straight to the point!

  • @vintageloverrich
    @vintageloverrich Před 3 lety +1

    Wow, very informative & not what I expected! Thanks for this 😁

  • @theonlineanimal6009
    @theonlineanimal6009 Před 2 lety +4

    Dude. This helped find a huge flaw in my most recent experiments. Thank you.

    • @Jeremya74
      @Jeremya74 Před 3 měsíci

      What was the flaw???

    • @matthewdavis9437
      @matthewdavis9437 Před 3 měsíci

      ​​@@Jeremya74 Probably experimenting on valuable coins. xD
      Vinegar tarnishes silver.

  • @mushroomkenai
    @mushroomkenai Před 4 lety +5

    Thank you for this experiment. Very healpful for my jewelry cleaning

  • @smitarajadhyaksha8656
    @smitarajadhyaksha8656 Před 4 lety +4

    Very nice video . It was so nice to see the entire process

  • @saraiortiz2280
    @saraiortiz2280 Před 3 lety +5

    Thanks for testing all three and sharing... Making my life much easier... 😁🤗

  • @spicydamesvintagejewelryth2155

    Wow! Thank you!!!! I was going clean my jewelry with vinegar. You just saved my jewelry! Very cool video I wasn't expecting that at all!

    • @EspenFrafalne
      @EspenFrafalne Před 3 lety +1

      I already had my silver chain in vinegar when searching for this, lol! Only 3-4 minutes though, so didnt notice much difference. I kinda think silver looks better when tarnished a bit anyway though, but dont want it all black, lol!

  • @michaelbrummel6710
    @michaelbrummel6710 Před 2 lety +7

    I ain't never tried removing tarnished silver coins with vinegar. But when I soaked my silver Morgan and Peace dollars for about 15 minutes in the vinegar it successfully removed the green patina tint that had developed over a number of years on the coins without darkening the surface at all. The fact that I dip them in vinegar was undetectable.

  • @steverundle8635
    @steverundle8635 Před 4 lety +2

    Thanks for the solution...proof positive!

  • @Gorpgorpdorme
    @Gorpgorpdorme Před 3 lety +9

    Instructions unclear the whole inside of my house is dark

  • @JoylieC
    @JoylieC Před 3 lety +6

    Good to know. Thank you.

  • @IamHappyHeart
    @IamHappyHeart Před 2 lety

    Sir, I would like to know of the blacken silver which soaked for 48 hours will work the same on stainless and silver-plated flatware?

  • @URTRAVEL_MD
    @URTRAVEL_MD Před 4 lety +10

    I heard that vinegar whiten and helps remove tarnish on silver but before doing it I tried looking at the web and here on youtube to see if anyone can show me evidently if it works and seeing your vid, I disregarded the vinegar thingy and tried the toothpaste with a toothbrush and damn it works like magic! Hands up to you bruh!!!

    • @oash6041
      @oash6041 Před 3 lety

      Baking soda works

    • @TobaccoRowe1960
      @TobaccoRowe1960 Před 3 lety +1

      if you think that works try valve grinding compound from the auto parts store

    • @shravyashetty3491
      @shravyashetty3491 Před rokem

      Same... This video saved both my silver rings and my spontaneous ass

  • @MrPurepecha87
    @MrPurepecha87 Před 3 lety +1

    That’s cool I wanted to tarnish a coin, I want this old look 👍🏼

  • @gmoritz71last52
    @gmoritz71last52 Před 3 lety +7

    "Copper Clad" implies that Copper is bonded over some other metal. The clad coin is two layers of cupronickel ( 75% copper and 25% nickel ), on a core of pure copper. The total composition of the coin is 8.33% nickel, with the remainder copper. ( see wiki page: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quarter_(United_States_coin) ).

  • @XxskidudekidxX
    @XxskidudekidxX Před 2 lety +2

    This is probably the funniest video I’ve ever seen on CZcams, man.
    Literally the last thing I was expecting to see was toothpaste being squirted onto a half dollar coin.

  • @Angel-uh6tz
    @Angel-uh6tz Před 4 lety +2

    The silver coin thats get black coz of vinegar. Can it be clean again?

  • @saghair88
    @saghair88 Před 4 lety +3

    Thnx man that really very useful video.

  • @08_crown_vic
    @08_crown_vic Před 3 lety +9

    If they are worth nothing, can I buy a few?

  • @MACKOY.TV1
    @MACKOY.TV1 Před 3 lety +1

    What kind of vinegar did you used too? And how much acidity?

  • @myxcapital4179
    @myxcapital4179 Před 3 lety +1

    simple and awesome video!

  • @tessahughes8726
    @tessahughes8726 Před 3 měsíci

    What happens if I let it soak in a toothpaste mix bath? It's old and was left with food on it. I tried just scrubbing but it's stuck and my daughter wants to use it for her wedding

  • @GreatSageCorban
    @GreatSageCorban Před 2 lety +3

    the least destructive I've found is using electro chemical (20grams table salt, 10 grams baking soda, hot or boiling water with aluminum, or a battery and connecting both ends to the silver piece) to remove tarnish. Then boiling water with and sponge to try and remove any greasy deposits, dawn maybe helpful here too. The next step up would be toothpaste and baking soda.

  • @cathymiller3086
    @cathymiller3086 Před 3 lety +9

    Add baking soda, use an aluminum pan, or line a pan with aluminum foil

  • @jaywholoveseveryone1721
    @jaywholoveseveryone1721 Před 2 lety +2

    vinegar, just like air, bleach and alcohol will tarnish/blacken silver. I never use these when I have my sterling silver bracelets on or I just wear gloves that reach to my elbow. Thanks for this experiment. I was curious about reactions of less than 92.5 silver content and acids.

  • @aaliyashaikh5515
    @aaliyashaikh5515 Před 2 měsíci

    I dipped my silver ring in vinegar for 24 hours, it is now tarnished. I tried aluminum, baking powder & salt method, its not working. Any method to reverse that? Kindly advice.

  • @Fumbledee
    @Fumbledee Před rokem

    Wow, thank you for sharing this info. I have a small sack of old silver coins that I want to clean, so I'll try the toothpaste and tooth brush method. Also, just subcribed to your channel! 😊😊

  • @Draconic404
    @Draconic404 Před rokem

    Does this work with other metals? I want to make a bronze-zinc coin shine

  • @susanfarley1332
    @susanfarley1332 Před 2 lety

    I have noticed that if my silver rings look a bit tarnished and I wash my hands, I usually use the dish soap in the kitchen sink, they lose the tarnish. I have even noticed the same thing after I take a shower. I don't know if I would have the same result with a badly tarnished ring.

  • @Ella_Amerika
    @Ella_Amerika Před 2 lety

    Thank you for saving my time ☺️

  • @EAGLEHORDER
    @EAGLEHORDER Před 3 lety +19

    do a video of cleaning the dark ones with toothpaste now that they are super dark ... lets see the results to that!

  • @mysteryguy793
    @mysteryguy793 Před 5 lety +2

    I wonder if that can also confirm that something is silver. Is there any other metal that tarnishes so much when put into vinegar?

    • @livefree6878
      @livefree6878  Před 5 lety +2

      Interesting, I would imagine anything silver plated would get dark like this. I have to try that. It would be interesting to take a mixture of different metals and put it in vinegar. My new steel comes out real shiny.

  • @llawma2588
    @llawma2588 Před 3 lety +20

    Thank you for the experiment... Was trying to use vinegar to clean my girlfriend's silver rings 😅😅😅

    • @abdallahsindi2787
      @abdallahsindi2787 Před 2 lety +3

      Clean it with toothpaste.. it will shine as it was when u bought it

    • @majidqureshi100
      @majidqureshi100 Před 2 lety +1

      I accidentally soaked my wife silver chain with bleach.
      Literally it turn black now, I'm trying to fix my mistake watching this video.
      Hope it will work.

    • @_Dennis2Society215
      @_Dennis2Society215 Před 2 lety

      @@majidqureshi100 Lmaooo 😭😭😭

  • @platinumarrow
    @platinumarrow Před 4 lety +4

    My experience so far is toothpaste isn't enough to clean a coin tarnished by soaking a long time in vinegar. We're you able to get the coin clean that you tarnished so badly? Thank you.

    • @TobaccoRowe1960
      @TobaccoRowe1960 Před 3 lety

      I can clean those with Valve grinding compound from the auto parts store

  • @kennethturk7629
    @kennethturk7629 Před 3 lety +19

    Try lime juice with some salt in it , heat up the silver or gold with a tourch not to much and drop it in . I was a jewler for 10years that's how they cleaned metal in Belize cheap and very effective

  • @ratlips4363
    @ratlips4363 Před 3 lety +27

    If you place some aluminum foil into the container with the vinegar, you'll clean up the silver immediately

    • @OverlandOne
      @OverlandOne Před 3 lety +7

      Yes, even add a little baking soda. I saw that on Mr. Wizard a long time ago. It is electrolysis and the tarnish travels right to the foil and off the silver. You are correct.

    • @safa6444
      @safa6444 Před 3 lety +1

      @@OverlandOne can we do this on cheap jewelleries too?

    • @OverlandOne
      @OverlandOne Před 3 lety +2

      @@safa6444 You would have to do a test area because, depending on the metals used in the cheap stuff, this might attack them too aggressively. Silver can handle it, not sure about other alloys and mixtures.

    • @safa6444
      @safa6444 Před 3 lety

      @@OverlandOne okii thanks ☺

  • @creationinspired200
    @creationinspired200 Před 4 měsíci

    That is exactly the result i was looking for now to figure out how to do this on nickel

  • @ronaldroller7176
    @ronaldroller7176 Před 3 lety

    Real interesting. Thanks.

  • @marchellabrahams
    @marchellabrahams Před 2 lety

    Thank you; very useful information.

  • @rr-gr1zh
    @rr-gr1zh Před 3 lety

    Is it silver or german silver? (alloy of zinc copper and nickel)

  • @akshida9741
    @akshida9741 Před 2 lety

    A girl friend of mine in high school used to shine her silver hoop earrings with lipstick lol it works wonders!

  • @ryushogun9890
    @ryushogun9890 Před rokem

    does vinegar dissolve other materials other than silver?

  • @MuhammadAli-qh8tg
    @MuhammadAli-qh8tg Před 2 lety

    Found this very useful. Thumbs up

  • @epauloconnor
    @epauloconnor Před 3 lety

    GOOD TO KNOW! THANK YOU!

  • @neilwaters1151
    @neilwaters1151 Před 3 lety +4

    Add baking soda leave for a few minutes then rinse with a sponge pad soaked in soapy water

  • @jeffjohnson1302
    @jeffjohnson1302 Před 3 lety +12

    Hey I have cleaned crappy looking silver coins for years....vinegar does work but you have to leave it for a few minutes then wipe it off with a cheese cloth. The longer you leave it in vinegar the darker it will be. Also a cheaper method is warm water, vinegar (50/50 mix) with salt and leave it in for a few minutes at a time and then cheesecloth to wipe it down.

    • @one959
      @one959 Před 17 dny

      A splash of vinegar in water before polishing silverware was how I was taught to do the cutlery when I worked in the kitchen of an Italian restaurant years ago.

  • @tlojewelrylove
    @tlojewelrylove Před rokem +5

    I'm surprised at your results. I'm not sure why you got the results you did but I make silver (and copper) jewelry and instead of buying commercial acids to clean off the fire scale from soldering, I use warm vinegar with salt and it amazing how well it cleans off the firescale from silver (and copper for that matter). After I remove my cleaned pieces, I either tumble it with steel shot and soapy water (blue Dawn dish soap) or brush with a brass brush and Dawn (soap acts as a lubricant) and it turns out beautiful and shiney. So again, I don't know what's happening there but I find it strange. LOL! Thanks for sharing and piquing my curiosity. 😄

  • @birage9885
    @birage9885 Před 3 lety

    What about borax, which does a great job on most things?

  • @pennsyltuckyden9823
    @pennsyltuckyden9823 Před 2 lety +4

    I use dawn dish washing liquid, cleans without the abrasive.

  • @jessiecassio8349
    @jessiecassio8349 Před 3 lety

    The toothbrush and paste is polishing it, the baking soda method removes only tarnish and leaves the dull areas looking dull

  • @Jeremy_Zack_Lucas
    @Jeremy_Zack_Lucas Před 3 lety +1

    _What type of toothpaste should I use?_

  • @shayjenkins6641
    @shayjenkins6641 Před 6 měsíci

    I already control bleach my own jeans. Which looks way better than any store. I'm trying to see if I can control tarnish silver coins today.

  • @axeljsk1281
    @axeljsk1281 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks for the video

  • @guloopy
    @guloopy Před rokem

    You are a life saver, tooth paste is amazing

  • @jamesharalson1317
    @jamesharalson1317 Před 3 lety +3

    Put enough Acetone in a bowl enough to cover the coin. About 5 minutes and take it out. Put coin is a bowl of distilled water, Take it out and put in another bowl of distilled water. Take coin out and gently blot dry with a clean soft towel. Put coin on another soft towel to air dry turning occasionally. Careful with the Acetone not to breath in the fumes. I had some newer uncirculated silver that was getting a stained look. Cleaned them this way, sent to PCGS for grading and they didn't know they were cleaned. All coins came back graded mint state 1 was graded mint state 70, 3 were mint state 69. They were all Silver Eagles. I never rubbed the coins, the Acetone does the work.

    • @joshkarr1832
      @joshkarr1832 Před 3 lety

      Thank you. I am trying this method tonight

  • @johnglenn7941
    @johnglenn7941 Před 3 lety +4

    Using baking soda and that brush is one of the fastest ways to make your coins worthless. That brush leaves minute scratches that a coin dealer can see with his loop, magnifying glass, and that makes the coin worth about face value.

    • @TobaccoRowe1960
      @TobaccoRowe1960 Před 3 lety +1

      Not applicable to coins that have been in circulation.

    • @TobaccoRowe1960
      @TobaccoRowe1960 Před 3 lety +1

      @Spice God after finishing with a fine grinding compound use something like this to restore the surface.
      Red Rouge Polishing Compound.
      This red polishing compound is known as a Red Rouge or Jewelers rouge that is originally made for the Jewelry trade. Used by professionals, you too can now buff your soft, fine, and precious metals to bring out their lustrous finish. This buffing compound can polish gold, silver, platinum, and brass.

  • @paul8914
    @paul8914 Před 3 měsíci

    Thanks. Colgate worked!

  • @mrhawk1924
    @mrhawk1924 Před 3 lety +2

    I clean my coins with a sparkle solution, it's beautiful. I have old silver $$$

  • @rustyislandable
    @rustyislandable Před 3 lety +1

    That was a good 30 seconds worth of video.

  • @MrDAHSIN
    @MrDAHSIN Před 11 dny

    I found vinegar works brilliantly on corroded silver. I Got a bag of old Netherlands East Indies .720 silver guilders from the 30s and early 40s that were completely corroded with severe green and brown chunks of corrosion. I paid melt for them so I wasn't concerned about their numismatic value per-se. Anyway, I started with a quick wash in warm water with some dish soap and a scrub to remove loose dirt and grime. Initially I actually tried the baking soda method but found that only worked with removing dirt and tarnish, while having little discernable effect on the corrosion. I also found baking soda to be severely abrasive leading to quite prominent and unsightly scratching. As such I went back to the drawing board and found a video on using vinegar. I got a cheap bottle of white vinegar and a dropped a few of the coins in a small tub of the stuff to observe the effects. Within 15 minutes the vinegar started taking on a greenish tint. After a couple of hours, nearly half of the better condition coins were perfectly clean, It took about 18 hours of soaking, with a periodic scrub using a soft tooth brush, along with some light picking at at heavy chunks of corrosion with a dental pick and bamboo skewers, but even the worst examples came perfectly clean. I'm not sure why your coins tarnished so badly in vinegar as mine didn't tarnish at all and were brighter and shinier even than when I first washed. Maybe it was the higher silver content of your US Constitutional sliver. I've also seen people post videos getting good results using peroxide but haven't tried that yet. Perhaps the biggest lesson is that every coin and every situation is different so you should probably do some tests with different methods first, while being careful not to do any further damage. While it may be junk silver, ugly corroded and dirty silver will put their silver value into question even as their condition has pretty much already destroyed their numismatic value anyway.

  • @rochellele8804
    @rochellele8804 Před 3 lety

    For copper coins or copper pans. Vinegar and salt. Lightly scrub. Rinse it with water.

  • @tlee9484
    @tlee9484 Před 2 lety

    I have an old silver bar with black tarnish on both ends, the ends are not wrapped tightly.
    I sure won't get near vinegar..😒

  • @samkola6343
    @samkola6343 Před 3 lety

    Great work ⚘

  • @ceed3d396
    @ceed3d396 Před 4 lety +2

    Cool video!!

  • @veew9500
    @veew9500 Před 3 lety +2

    Wow, thanks for sharing... I was thinking about using vinegar to clean my silver but I thought I check to see how it works. God is so good. He gave me wisdom and this video to help. Thanks again.🕊

  • @robk1310
    @robk1310 Před rokem +1

    Warm vinegar with a teaspoon of salt cleans modern coins well. So does hot sauce. No joke. Try it.

  • @iLikeBhr
    @iLikeBhr Před 3 lety

    Try covering the 90 percent coins with milk and let them sit for a couple hours until the milk gets sour.. then take them out, rinse with water and put into vinegar.. coins turn into a spectacular black color

  • @Yummie-Cakes
    @Yummie-Cakes Před 3 lety +1

    Nice video!😎☕🥰

  • @MiLlaJewelers
    @MiLlaJewelers Před 2 lety

    Super interesting!!!!

  • @jazziejan5506
    @jazziejan5506 Před 2 lety +1

    I used aluminum foil hot water and baking soda. You will smell the tarnish in minutes. Will not hurt the silver.

  • @vfromthaburg
    @vfromthaburg Před 3 lety

    Thank you....🦋

  • @dattdude6077
    @dattdude6077 Před 3 lety +1

    ABSOLUTLEY correct with the toothpaste crest HD worked better than arm & hammer.
    thxs for the vid.

  • @rajeshpais1629
    @rajeshpais1629 Před 3 lety +1

    Amazing video

  • @PooreJon
    @PooreJon Před 3 lety

    Very informative

  • @praveengodara3913
    @praveengodara3913 Před 3 lety

    Thanks thats in detail

  • @greenlight8819
    @greenlight8819 Před 3 lety +1

    But if they have higher silver content than newer coins, doesn’t that mean they’re more valuable, like ones produced before 1964? How do you know if you have a coin of greater value?

    • @joenuts5389
      @joenuts5389 Před 3 lety

      They are produced before 1964

    • @nickybritain4900
      @nickybritain4900 Před 3 lety

      What coins have less silver in them, from what year and from what country please? Are you saying U.S. or U.K. coins? I have lots of U.K. 6d coins and some old 1d’s

    • @joenuts5389
      @joenuts5389 Před 3 lety

      @@nickybritain4900 im talking about us coins

    • @greenlight8819
      @greenlight8819 Před 3 lety

      @@nickybritain4900 I’m talking about US.

  • @markstrachan6380
    @markstrachan6380 Před 5 lety +1

    Interesting video thanks for sharing that. I prefer not to clean my constitutional silver coins but I know someone out is doing this. Just maybe they will take your advice and clean them respectfully without damaging our beautiful silver.

    • @dougiequick1
      @dougiequick1 Před 4 lety

      Not "our" silver lol ....it is THEIRS and if they love it polished? WHATEVER...most of it is "junk" anyhow ...just bullion that used to be money and it's worth no less polished than tarnished ...sorry I meant "with patina" lol....So brush on you bright freaks! Just remember Everytime you brush you loose a teensy bit more silver....which hey don't mean didly if you have 20 coins. Personally I DO clean the really nasty junk silver....there are always some black ones or just UGLY ones....and they look so much more pleasing once cleaned in baking soda and warm water....they actually LOOK like silver again rather than gunk

  • @jjirish2
    @jjirish2 Před 4 lety +1

    Toothpaste worked great. Thanks for the tip

  • @ezrabrooks12
    @ezrabrooks12 Před 3 lety

    GOOD JOB.

  • @WhiteDragon689
    @WhiteDragon689 Před 2 lety

    Cleaning silver with vinegar and salt. It is a mild type of pickle solution used by silversmiths.

  • @TobaccoRowe1960
    @TobaccoRowe1960 Před 3 lety

    Try valve grinding compound and a broken toothpick. Then polish with toothpaste.

  • @MrNickMulgrave
    @MrNickMulgrave Před 3 lety +1

    I prefer to clean my numismatics on my benchtop electric buffer with some cutting agent. They come up better than new.

  • @Kwameking1
    @Kwameking1 Před 2 lety

    Thank you Sir

  • @pareshacharya9044
    @pareshacharya9044 Před 3 lety

    i have coins how much price.

  • @commonmancrypto1648
    @commonmancrypto1648 Před 4 lety +1

    I use baking soda and water.

  • @XxskidudekidxX
    @XxskidudekidxX Před 2 lety

    Got here looking for how to patina a silver chain.
    Guess I found my answer for that too😂

  • @TheMayflowerPilgrem
    @TheMayflowerPilgrem Před 4 lety +1

    Vinager with hydrogen poroxide and salt. Thats home made pickle. Works best warm

  • @Packaroo
    @Packaroo Před rokem

    Heat up the vinegar to the temperature of a cup of coffee, and add about half a teaspoon of salt, stir it up, drop the silver into it, after about 20 minutes or so, the oxide should come off, including any scale on the metal. Works for me.

  • @frankorosz901
    @frankorosz901 Před rokem

    When doing as experiment you do not change it by adding other objects. The copper and stainless steel (containing nickle) changed everything.

  • @Lisa-qs1xd
    @Lisa-qs1xd Před 3 lety

    Thanks!

  • @TobaccoRowe1960
    @TobaccoRowe1960 Před 3 lety

    If you bought a 1957 Chevy 2 door Bel Aire with really bad paint on it would you repaint it to look brand new or would you drive around in a really expensive junk heap ?
    If some patine is desired it can be varied in grinding to what ever is desired. And then it can be finished to look natural in the polishing. Some coins just got so much crap on them you can't even read the words. Make look as new as desired.

  • @steveham2622
    @steveham2622 Před 3 lety

    CLR works good too.(CALCIUM, LIME RUST CLEANER)

  • @DannyoRaiden
    @DannyoRaiden Před rokem +1

    Just use with bicarbonate, salt and vinager. Use a bowl with allufoil and boil hot water and voila.
    Dont fprget to rinse in warm water and after that wipe it with a microfibercloth and clean it good.

  • @Seeds-Of-The-Wayside
    @Seeds-Of-The-Wayside Před rokem

    If you set the coins in the aluminum pan and pour salt over them with the vinegar, they get shiny real quick

  • @jeffw1267
    @jeffw1267 Před 3 lety +4

    If you want to make silver dark within a few seconds, soak it in hydrogen peroxide. The silver starts to bubble because it acts as a catalyst to break down the hydrogen peroxide quickly, and silver oxide quickly forms on the surface.

    • @Josue-xd5ru
      @Josue-xd5ru Před 3 lety +1

      Yes, I learned the hard way lol.

  • @bala8oo
    @bala8oo Před 3 lety +3

    Really strange because I’ve come here straight from a baking soda cleaning video and there the coins came up literally like a brand new coin?

  • @azerethroth5761
    @azerethroth5761 Před 2 lety

    Toothpaste it is, haha!
    Thanks, my man!