You need to be more specific. Clad just means the coin is layered.
Current retail value is $10.00
It depends on if it's a 90% silver coin, a 40% silver coin or a clad coin. Also why the date is missing. Take it to a coin dealer it MAY BE worth up to $20.00.
Yes, it can also contain silver. Experts can tell by holding the coin & observing its edge & by its weight. Clad coins are usually lighter
All the bicentennial 40% silver clad coins were struck at the San Francisco Mint and have the "S" mintmark. If the coin is missing one of the designers initials, post new question.
With a date of 1979 the coin has no silver it's a clad coin made of copper-nickel alloy bonded to a core of copper but if the coin is missing on full side it may have significant value. Take it to a dealer for and assessment.
It depends if it was a clad it would be about 20-30 dollars If it was silver it would be around 40-50 dollars
The 1973 proof Eisenhower dollars were struck in 40% silver clad and copper-nickel clad. Average retail value of the CN coin is $7.00, the 40% is $14.00.
It Is about 1 dollar. There is no silver in that coin. There was 90 percent prior to 1964 and 1965 to 1970 was 40 . It is now copper nickel clad
The composition of a 40% silver US coin is the outer layers are .800 silver & .200 copper bonded to the inner core of .209 silver and .791 copper.
No, clad is used in the coin collecting community talking about the Copper and Nickel "sandwich" current, non-silver, coins have. So a clad quarter by definition would not have any silver because a clad quarter is a quarter with no silver. However, quarters were made of silver before 1965 so any quarter dated 1964 and earlier contains 90% silver, but those coins would not be considered "clad".
The value of a silver coin is always changing because the value of silver is always changing. See the related link below for a silver coin value calculator. This does not give the actual value of the coin but it does give the value of the metal used to make the coin. This is know as the melt value.
Metal value depends on the purity of the silver and the weight of the coin. Numismatic value depends on the condition of the coin.