Who turned off the light
Buffalos Lyrics


We have lyrics for these tracks by Buffalos:


You Sink You sink into my headset I have never smelled such a…


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Comments from YouTube:

SPCCedarRapids3420

Your method that I tried really worked. My grandmother used to be a coin collector through her child time. I was looking through her 55 year old collection and found a dateless buffalo nickel. I tried to think of anything I’d imagine. I came up with a specialized acid treatment, but later realized that it may destroy the value of those rare coins. So, I found this video, and followed every direction, and got 1915! There was no mint mark, so it was Philadelphia minted. I priced it to be $5! Those dateless buffalo nickels are believed to be at least 90-95 years of age at the youngest and 100-110 years at the most.

-oiiio-

All 'Buffalo Nickels' were minted from 1913 - 1938. The Bison on Mound reverse was used only for part of 1913, so they are now 109 years old. The remainder (with Bison on Plain) are between 84 and 109 years old at this time.

SPCCedarRapids3420

@5280 Adventures IKR! Bc of it, I’d credit this video for such a truly effective method

5280 Adventures

Amazing

802 Outdoor Adventures

This works on silver coins too. I soaked some slick silvers I had and discovered that one of them was a 1733 pistareen! Thanks for sharing this.

Team Lynch B.M.D.

Hard to destroy value if you don’t know what it is you will end up giving it away or just throwing it into a pile of other coins.
Nice tip, I would use it on a detected find that I want to know the date on. If I have a $100 coin and I destroy the value I don’t care as I wasn’t selling it any way. $1000 bucks then I would regret it😁

Joe Lugo

Do You have an E mail address that I can contact you? My 1913 S nickel was brown but I could see the date quite well. After using your method I noticed 2 things: 1. the nickel was very dull to look at and 2. the date on the nickel was harder to read. Any suggestion on how I can restore and improve the date and bring some shine to It?

-oiiio-

That blue color reminds me of copper sulfate.

Perhaps copper being dissolved out of the .75 copper, .25 nickel alloy of the Five Cent 'Nickel'?

Jerry Dineen

Thank you Tony, that's a cool little trick!

William Flint

I'm pretty sure that last nickel is a 1919. Thanks for making this video!

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