Want this question answered?
Please rephrase the question
Plated coins are considered to be altered items with no extra numismatic value.
Farthings were made from bronze. If you have a silver Farthing, somebody has plated it and it is subsequently of no value as a collectible.
These are not made by any US mint, and have no numismatic value. If the coins are silver and not silver plated, the value would be for the silver in the coins.
The Iraqi coins made for general use since 1960 are made of nickel, copper-nickel, stainless steel, copper plated steel and nickel plated steel.
The 'copper' (1p & 2p coins) are made from 97% copper - and 3& trace elements. The 'silver' coins are made from nickel-plated sheet steel.
New Zealand has never issued a silver Halfpenny. Somebody has possibly silver plated it. Modified coins have no collector value.
It's an ordinary bronze cent that was plated. A lot of 1976 coins were plated with silver or gold and sold as "collectibles" during the Bicentennial, but as soon as the celebrations were over the market for them dried up.
Any reputable coin dealer will tell you that gold plated coins are worthless to a collector and they are damaged. However, often gold plated coins are sold (often deceptively) to buyers via TV or internet marketing. There are only a handful of gold plated coins created by legitimate government mints that are collectible (this is the same for "colorized" coins) but the US mint has not made any of them. A gold plated US coin is damaged and generally only worth face value (or silver scrap value in the case of older coins).
US one cent coins have never been struck in silver. The coin is likely silver plated for jewelry. The coin is face value.
Silver plated or just looks silver. No silver one cent coins have ever been made. It's only face value unless someone wants it.
Yes, it can also contain silver. Experts can tell by holding the coin & observing its edge & by its weight. Clad coins are usually lighter