Rolled gold is a very thin sheet of gold that is laminated to a lesser metal (usually brass). The two layers of metal are heated under pressure to fuse them together
It means that it is gold plated 14k gold over another metal. The original amount of gold was about 1/30th of the total weight
If the case is marked as karat gold, yes. That would be 10K, 14K, 18K. There may be some marked 9K. Most are not solid gold. They are marked RGP, (rolled gold plate), or 1/20th 14k which is one quality of gold fill.
I found this on the gold buyer P3M Refining site after searching for quite a while and filtering out all the "Roll Play Game" answers. I guess you meant to write RGP. So 14K means 14 carats. It means a gold content of (100/24*14) per cent which is about 58%. R.G.P. or RGP means "Rolled Gold Plate". That means its gold content is too low to be stamped GF for Gold-filled.
RGP stands for rolled gold plated. An 18 RGP mark on jewelry means the jewelry is not a real 18k gold but only gold plated.
No worries a lot of jewelry has markings like RL. Just the name of the business or person putting their stamp on it. Now something like rgp means rolled gold not much value. I have 2 14k RL sets of earrings and they 100% real.
rgp 10 kt means its "rolled gold plated" of the 10 kt variety
As of July 2014, the market cap for Regency Energy Partners LP (RGP) is $12,648,905,684.22.
10k rgp means 10 karat gold rolled gold plate. In other words, it's gold PLATED.
18k rgp is "rolled gold plate"
no
rolled gold plated
Rolled gold plate