It means u have got 100 and 5 gold men and happy Halawlaween
Probably a 100 mills 1 Troy oz gold bar. 100 mills is just a gold plating.
100 mills layered Gold or Silver is only plating of 1.2 microns or more thick and has a low value on the open market.
The key there is 100 mills. That means the bar is plated with a layer of gold that is 100 millionths of an inch think. Many sellers will use the term clad rather than played, however both mean the same thing. The value of the actual gold is around $0.02. However no gold company will touch these. It cost more to remove the gold plating than the value of the gold. So these bars are only worth their collectible value and have no actual previous metal value.
100 mills is merely a thin plating and has a very low value because the amount of gold is very small. I would not advise anyone to spend their money on such coins.
100 mills
There is 31.10348 Grams per troy oz 1 MILL is one millionth of a troy ounce So 31.10348(Grams per Troy Oz) X .000001 (one millionth of a Troy Oz) = 0.00003110348 of a Gram 1 MILL = 0.00003110348 Gram Today Gold is at $42.24 per gram So 0.00003110348 (of a Gram) X 42.24(price per Gram) = $0.0013138109952 So a 100 MILLs of gold is worth $0.0013138109952(price per MILL) X 100(MILLs) = ~ $0.13
over 100 flour mills
It means an alloy that contains 100% pure gold
The key there is 100 mills. That means the bar is plated with a layer of gold that is 100 millionths of an inch think. Many sellers will use the term clad rather than played, however both mean the same thing. The value of the actual gold is around $0.02. However no gold company will touch these. It cost more to remove the gold plating than the value of the gold. So these bars are only worth their collectible value and have no actual previous metal value.
100
That is a measure of Gold weight, not gold purity. A bar described as "1oz 100 mills 24k GOLD!!!!" contains one ounce of worthless scrap metal, plated with gold with only 100 millionths (0.0001 of an troy oz of gold). In plating, " MIL " stands for thousands of an inch but " MILL " is mass and is millionths of an troy oz (0.0001). So if Gold is trading at $1,300 per troy oz 100 mill is 0.0001 X $1300 = $0.13 worth of gold. eBay seems to be full of these sorts of items. The terms "solid" (meaning full of scrap metal, not hollow) and "pure gold" (meaning the plating is pure, not the scrap metal) are often used misleadingly, while the term "plated" almost never appears. Gold plated items are generally almost worthless; for example, a 1oz 100 mill plated-gold bar might sell for $10 on a good day, while a 1oz solid gold bar currently sells for at least $1000.