68Camaro wrote:Dunno, but from the photo, as worn as it seems to be, it wouldn't surprise me if >half the weight was gone. There is virtually nothing left of the reverse, and the obverse is barely there. That weight would make it more like a $700 coin, but still, sweet.
Thogey wrote:Why not just take a scratch and test it.
Why would anyone be concerned about altering the coin.
You may as well beat it up into a little ball and test it.
It's worth melt.
Thogey wrote:Why not just take a scratch and test it.
tractorman wrote:A find like this would be reason enough for me to get a gold testing kit. You just rub it on a stone, right?
uthminsta wrote:Let me paraphrase the one law of cleaning coins:
"The first rule of scratching a coin is don't scratch a coin."
uthminsta wrote:If it is proven to be gold, preferably by means such as mentioned/offered by Market Harmony, I would be willing to pay more than melt for it.
Testing For 20K & 24K
Scratch the gold piece on the stone. Next, scratch any item of known karat (coin or needle) on the stone. Apply one drop of acid to area. The material that starts to disappear first has the lower karat.
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