10 cents. The plating makes it an altered coin.
10 cents. It's a novelty coin.
Ten cents - it's not real gold, it's plated. The US never made gold dimes.
Dimes have never been made of gold. Perhaps your coin was gold plated. There's no specific value for it, so it's only worth as much as someone will pay.
About 10 cents. The plating is probably so thin it wouldn't pay for the trouble of stripping it off for sale.
The gold plating is done by someone other than the U.S. Mint and adds absolutely no numismatic value. It's only worth as much as someone on eBay is willing to pay, but only being a 1994 dime, that won't be much.
It's either a novelty coin or a gold plated dime. If it's only a gold plated dime it's worth around $2.50. If it's a novelty coin it's worthless.
It is gold plated and therefore is only worth what a normal (damaged) 1941 dime is worth, which is about $2.20 or so in scrap silver.
10 cents. It's a novelty coin.
This did not come from the mint like that. It has to be gold plated. No collector value.
10 cents, it's a novelty coin that has been plated.
Ten cents - it's not real gold, it's plated. The US never made gold dimes.
U.S. dimes have never been made of gold, nor were there any gold coins minted in the 1960s. What you have is a gold-plated dime, not worth anything to collectors above face value.
No. It's plated.
Numismatically, the 1943 Mercury Dime is fairly common, and sio would need to be in one of the higher uncirculated grades to be worth much over its "melt value" - plated (even with gold), it will never be worth more than the value of its silver. With silver at $30 per troy ounce (as of February 2011), it is worth about US$2.15.
Sorry, but there are no gold dimes. Your coin has been plated (maybe with a few cents worth of gold) or been exposed to some chemical that has caused the color to change.
It's plated. The US never made gold dimes. No gold coins of less than one dollar have ever been made.
It's plated or just looks like gold. The US never made gold dimes. No gold coins with a denomination of less than one dollar have ever been made by a U.S. Mint. With a date of 1911 it's a Barber dime and is worth about $3.00 for the silver in it.