When Vespasian said "Pecunia non olet", he evidentially hadn't met my coin. Not only was he 250 years too early, but it probably didn't stink back in the day. But it does now, smell-wise at least.
So, I just received this coin, auction photo below:
On inspection under a 10x loupe I noticed a couple of small potential BD spots that'd weren't there in the auction photo. I decided to give it a rinse with soap and warm water (which I often do - harmless to coins) to see if it came off, and unfortunately it did, although there's no visible damage to the coin at this stage.
What I also noticed from handling the coin was that it had a strong and rather unpleasant chemical smell, which transferred to my hands and wouldn't come off when I washed them.
I decided to give the coin a slightly better soap+water wash to try to get the chemical smell off, to no avail, but then saw that that much of the dark toning had come off revealing the stripped bronze underneath. At this point I gave it a further rinse in acetone to try to remove the smell, which it mostly did, as well as removing what litle was left of the artificial toner.
Here's the coin now, after it's soap+water and acetone baths:
Looking at the edges of the coin, there is some remnants of a thick dark green patina, giving an idea of what it may have started out like before being stripped and stinky-toned.
The coin wasn't cheap, but it's an unlisted bust and mint state, so I'm not going to try returning it. I'll probably just let it retone naturally. I'm more concerned if that was real BD, and if it comes back. Any suggestions for best treatment for a coin of this type if it does?
The coin came from the same NN auction house as PNO CEO Per D's wash-off-toning coin, so appears to be something they are using. Really have to wonder what it is given the nasty smell! Buyer beware of these dark toned coins.