Gold / Silver bi-metal?

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Mike Willner, Jan 21, 2008.

  1. Mike Willner

    Mike Willner Member

    I was wondering if there are any bi-metal coins that combine gold and silver? Is anyone aware of such coins, say with a silver center and a gold rim.
     
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  3. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator

    The 2000 Library of Congress $10 gold comes to mind.
     
  4. jnpjresq

    jnpjresq New Member

    Bingo! That is the only one I have ever seen.
     
  5. spock1k

    spock1k King of Hearts

    there are others from singapore, thailand. etc. if you are interested most o the m are pretty cheap on ebay unlike the library of congress
     
  6. Troodon

    Troodon Coin Collector

    ? Wasn't that gold and platinum, not gold and silver?
     
  7. Hobo

    Hobo Squirrel Hater

    In 1994 a gold & silver bimetallic coin was issued to commemorate the 800th anniversary of the Vienna mint.
     
  8. spock1k

    spock1k King of Hearts

    yes you are right i should post that coin to the forum so we can all bask in its glory
     
  9. gxseries

    gxseries Coin Collector

  10. Troodon

    Troodon Coin Collector

    It is a beutiful coin... on my list of coins to buy if I ever win the lottery lol it's second on my list after a high grade St. Gaudens double eagle.

    It is to date, the only bi-metallic coin the US has ever produced. Also it's the only commemorative coin that US has produced containing platinum, and the only platinum coin the US has ever minted besides the American Platinum Eagles.

    They should make more... gold/silver actually would be a great idea and make the coin reasonably affordable to more people.

    Mintage was pretty low on this one (about 27,000 proof, about 7,000 uncirculated)... I think it usually goes for about $1500 in proof these days (gold and platinum are on the rise and the affects the floor on the price of course.) The uncirculated is about double that since mintage of the uncirculated was just over 7000.
     
  11. spock1k

    spock1k King of Hearts



    i realaly dont have money for more gold coins so although i like your idea i cannot endorse it. IMHO the st gaude's liberty is overrated both the designs the modern and the classical have in high grades bu it grows old. I like the indian and the liberty series better. you can geta proof for about 1k and the unc for about 2.5k on ebay. MHO if i wa sjust collecting for fun i would buy the prrof its more beautiful and use the remaing money to buy 2 st gaudens or some other coins :)
     
  12. Troodon

    Troodon Coin Collector

    Well I can only afford about one, maybe 2 gold coins a year lol... (usually bought with my tax refund, why I actually look foreard to doing my taxes lol) and wouldn't mind a silver/gold bi-metallic being one of them.

    Not all designs appeal to all people of course... I happen to think the Barber series are about the ugliest coins the US has ever produced (yes, I think even the SBA is better, at least her gender is obvious. And it has a very nice reverse at least, not some eagle that looks like it hasn't been eating very well.) A lot of people disagree with me on that I'm sure. Though apparetly some contemporary sources agreed with my assessment lol... why the 1892 wasn't saved in great numbers.

    Well actually if you count commems the Korean War commem is even uglier... don't know what they were thinking on that one...

    I'm sure the St. Gaudens isn't everyone's favorite, but I'm sure most people will admit that it's at least really good. Would like to own just one, not going to try to collect several or anything lol... wouldn't even mind it being lightly circulated as long as it doesn't have any major scratches. An AU would be good enough for me if that caused it to drop into the realm of affordability, which it just might.

    Hoping for a good refund this year lol...
     
  13. JIMV

    JIMV New Member

    What about electrum...isn't that a gold, silver combo
     
  14. Troodon

    Troodon Coin Collector

    Er that's a gold/silver alloy. What is meant here is two metals being completely separate from each other (the planchet is made of an inner ring of one metal and an outer ring of another.)
     
  15. spock1k

    spock1k King of Hearts

    gold scares me these days
     
  16. JIMV

    JIMV New Member

    Ok, I hesitate to ask wy anyone would do that.....
     
  17. Troodon

    Troodon Coin Collector

    Um... because after making such a thing, people would be willing to exchange money for it?

    I'm not sure I understand what it is you don't understand.
     
  18. JIMV

    JIMV New Member

    Such 'coins' sound more like jewelry than coin of the realm. The bullion value would be very hard to calculate quickly and the face value would never be a reflection of that bullion. If you want to coin money as jewelry, then go for it but I do not see anyone ever using the stuff as a coin is intended, as an exchange media for goods.

    If I just wanted to buy pretty things I's spend my money at Tiffanies, not on Vcoins. I know this is off topic, but is a coin really a coin if it is never circulated anywhere (I am not taslking about special grades of circulated coins, but of the coins that never see the street at all? If not, then folk who collect those things are really collecting curiosities or bullion, not coins)

    Nothing wrong with that, but is it coin collecting?
     
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