Want this question answered?
A numismatist who collects coins.
Yes. Yes.
The plating adds nothing to the value of a dollar coin, unless someone wants it.
First it's gold plated, but not by the mint. And it's a common Eisenhower dollar and value is what ever you can get.
Gold-plated, but not gold. All circulating Eisenhower dollars were struck in copper-nickel, so the gold-plating doesn't add anything to its $1 value.
The US has NOT made a gold one dollar coin since 1889. The coin you have is a just a gold plated 1977 Eisenhower dollar that's only worth a dollar unless you find someone that wants it.
Not gold and not plated. It's made of manganese brass. (And yes, it's worth something: it's worth one dollar.)
The coin is a common bicentennial Eisenhower dollar that MAY have been gold plated or just toned a gold color, the coin is face value.
The gold plating adds nothing to the value of the coin and has no collectible value at all unless you find someone who wants it.
Gold necklaces contain the chemical element of gold. This is true if the gold necklace is real gold instead of plated gold. Some gold necklaces are not truly gold.
Sorry no US one dollar GOLD coins dated 1972. A 1972 one dollar coin is a Eisenhower dollar. None were struck in gold. Many have been privately plated with small amounts of gold and sold as collectibles but are actually only worth a dollar.
There's no such coin. If you have a large (38 mm) coin with a picture of President Eisenhower on the front, it's an ordinary copper-nickel dollar that was plated with a tiny amount of gold, and has no extra value except as a curiosity.