Measure the gold, take the volume of the gold, then divide mass over volume to give you the density of gold if it was the same as gold density then it is right other wise that ring is doggy
Just Me
weapons, population, and foos, + a good army
I work at an Ohio bank and received one of these coins yesterday. It is a Susan B Anthony, not some other woman and it is gold colored. It's not, however, real gold and the value is still $1. Still kind of cool to own though.
go to yoville.com you will see small pots of gold in corners just click them .
salt
18 karat Rolled Gold Plate...plated one ;)
14KG (14 Karat Gold) is 100% gold, not gold plated.
Gold filled is all gold while a plated one is just a combination of other metals that are then gold plated.
18kgp is 18 carat gold plated so it is not gold inside just plated in gold which will wear off with time and sterling silver is silver all through it not plated.
14k F means gold fill not gold plated gold fill is better than plated but not solid gold just a thin layer of gold applied to some other metal
Not much. It is gold plated which means it is over a base metal and not gold.
I just bought a Hampton a 20 piece 24kt gold plated silverware set for $20.00
No - it just looks nice. When an item is electro plated, the plating material is very thin - less than 0.01mm - so there is hardly any volume of gold. So even though gold is expensive, a gold-plated item is worth just a few pence (cents) more than the item would be without the gold. This is ok for inexpensive jewelry, but do not be fooled into buying any gold or silver 'investment bars' or coins that are plated or described as '100 mills' or 'HGE' ('heavy-gold-electroplate') - these are just lumps of base metal (such as steel or copper) with no real value.
No, not unless the item that is plated is itself worth anything (such as a gold-plated Rolls Royce).When an item is electro plated, the plating material is very thin - less than 0.01mm - so there is hardly any volume of gold. So even though gold is expensive, a gold-plated item is worth just a few pence (cents) more than the item would be without the gold. This is ok for inexpensive jewelry, but do not be fooled into buying any gold or silver 'investment bars' or coins that are plated or described as '100 mills' or 'HGE' ('heavy-gold-electroplate') - these are just lumps of base metal (such as steel or copper) with no real value.
No, they are worth no more than the metal (or face) value of the coin, the gold plating adds so little gold that it would cost more to de-plate the coin than the gold is worth. For example, a 1965 gold plated half dollar would be worth ~$4.50 in silver scrap just like a normal 1965 half dollar. A 2002 gold plated quarter would be worth just a quarter, just like a normal 2002 quarter.
Yes. Gold plate is just gold over a base metal. It will come off and change colors.
18 KRGP means that it is gold plated metal, but not sure whether it is gold plated silver or just another cheap metal