No. They are gold plated.
No. They are gold plated.
No numismatic value. A dollar for each coin maybe
It most likely is gold plated, gold plating adds really no value to the coin and like any other 1999 nickel, it is worth 5 cents.
This is NOT a real coin. It's a reproduction that has no numismatic collectible value. It's value is just what someone will pay for it.
Nothing. Whatever value the coin had as a collectible vanished when the coin was modified.
The current (1999-2013) China 1 Yuan coin is nickel-plated steel
The coin is only face value.
These copy's of the 1933 Double Eagle have no numismatic collectible value, most sell for $5.00 at coin shows.
It is only gold plated which adds no extra value. Since it is a gold plated coin it is considered altered and is worth face value.
Its value is based only on the value of the metals it contains. A plated coin has no true numismatic value.
$1. The plating adds nothing to the coin's numismatic value and would cost more to remove than its metal value.