SACHA CHUA? Please post a new question with a clarification and/or corrected spelling.
$1. The presidential dollar coins are struck from brass, not gold and are not rare in the least.
It is not rare, just expensive. But, you can get small silver coins for as little as $2.
Lots and lots. It is nearly impossible to say. Almost every civilization has struck numerous different types of coins, some more rare than others. To even put together a complete set of one of every type of coin struck in Great Britain would be nearly impossible, and with several millions of dollars it might be possible to get a type set of all the coins in a young nation like the US.
I began collecting coins as a teenager, and by my thirties I was a full-fledged numismatist with thousands of regular and rare coins.
The Bureau of Engraving and Printing has an explanation of these letters and numbers on their website here : http://www.moneyfactory.gov/small1denom.html Dan Moore The Working Man's Rare Coins http://www.workingmancoins.com
nimrod
For the Peace dollar series 1935 is not a rare coin. The only rare Peace dollar is the 1922 high relief matte proof coins.
The 1923-S Peace dollar is not rare by any means, circulated coins are only $37.00-$41.00. Typical Mint State coins are $47.00-$51.00
A hundred dollar coin produced in 1981 and another hundred dollar coin produced in 1976 are considered to be one of the few rare coins produced by Trinidad and Tobago.
These coins are NOT rare and are worth face.
No. Billions of them sit in drawers and bank vaults. They also are mixed in with modern dollar coins in vending machines.
The 1923-S Peace dollar is not rare by any means, circulated coins are only $37.00-$41.00. Typical Mint State coins are $47.00-$51.00
None of the bicentennial dollar coins struck for circulation are rare or even scarce and most dealers don't buy them. Only proof and uncirculated coins sold from the Mint have more than face value.
For the modern $1.00 coins, basically yes.
All so-called "golden" $1 coins (both Sacagawea and Presidential Portraits) are standard circulation coins worth one dollar. They do not contain any gold and are not rare.
The answer to your question is NO. None of the one dollar coins that are "gold colored" contain any gold, they're made of brass. Neither coin is rare by any means.
$1. The presidential dollar coins are struck from brass, not gold and are not rare in the least.