More than 1000 Malaysian Ringits. 400 - 500 Canadian dollars
It's the purity of the gold, as a decimal fraction. .9999 means the ring is 99.99% pure. That surprises me a bit, though, because jewelry is normally not made of gold that fine because it would be too soft for normal wearing.
Today, the fine gold price is around US $40. 14 karat gold is 58.5% of the fine gold. 58.5% of 4 grams is 2.34 grams. 2.34 grams × US $40 = US $93.60 [June 2010]
anywhere around $150.00-$200.00
The spot price of silver.
363 gbp
More than 1000 Malaysian Ringits. 400 - 500 Canadian dollars
It's the purity of the gold, as a decimal fraction. .9999 means the ring is 99.99% pure. That surprises me a bit, though, because jewelry is normally not made of gold that fine because it would be too soft for normal wearing.
305.46 U.S. Dollars$
.9999 is 10 times purer (10 times less impurities).
Since such an object does not and could not exist, its worth is hard to estimate.
You are probably referring to a British 5 pence coin. It is copper nickel, not silver, and is worth no more than its exchange value (about US 8 cents as of January 2010) unless it is in Proof or Brilliant Uncirculated condition.
Today, the fine gold price is around US $40. 14 karat gold is 58.5% of the fine gold. 58.5% of 4 grams is 2.34 grams. 2.34 grams × US $40 = US $93.60 [June 2010]
That depends on a lot of factors.... is it PURE silver? .999 fine? or is it sterling silver? 92 1/2% fine? or is it some sort of industrial silver? If it is "scrap" silver it would be worth far less than silver bullion or silver coins.
With the exception of the .9999 fine Gold Buffalo $50 coin, all American Gold Eagles are 91.6% pure gold.
There is a real Bill of Rights coin but it is a commemorative coin minted in 1993. Since yours has a 1991 date and "one troy ounce .999 fine silver" on it, I think you probably have a bullion coin and it is worth whatever the silver in it is worth on any given day.
To determine the value of 6 grams of fine .999 gold, you would need to check the current market price of gold. Multiply the weight of gold (6 grams) by the purity (0.999) to calculate the actual pure gold content. Then, multiply that by the current market price of gold per gram to get the total value.