Re: CS>Canadian Maple Leaf Coin

2014-09-20 Thread yousouf eydatoula
I have been using two one-once maple leaf coins as anode and cathode ( I alternate the poles) for 3 years now. They do tarnish just like regular silver wires. On Saturday, September 20, 2014 10:40 PM, John Popelish wrote: On 09/20/2014 09:33 PM, TJ Garland wrote: > Are you sure it is not

Re: CS>Canadian Maple Leaf Coin

2014-09-20 Thread John Popelish
On 09/20/2014 09:33 PM, TJ Garland wrote: Are you sure it is not a fake? It should weigh Exactly 31.1 grams. It should get hot immediately if you touch the edge to your stove eye. It should be very malleable when you hammer it into a better electrode. I am in the business. I have an xray analyze

Re: CS>Canadian Maple Leaf Coin

2014-09-20 Thread TJ Garland
Are you sure it is not a fake? It should weigh Exactly 31.1 grams. It should get hot immediately if you touch the edge to your stove eye. It should be very malleable when you hammer it into a better electrode. I am in the business. I have an xray analyzer. I verify everything i handle. State powe

CS>Canadian Maple Leaf Coin

2014-09-20 Thread John Popelish
I bought a 1 troy oz silver Canadian, Maple leaf coin to use as an anode . These run about half the price of silver wire of the same purity, and with a lot more confident provenance. But it does not act like it is bare silver. It is extremely clean and shiny for a bare silver surface, with