Gold Bullion Bars

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We buy Gold Bullion Bar

We purchase minted Gold Bullion Bars, of any weight and from anywhere in the world.  The Gold Britannia Bars from the Royal Mint are generally 24-carat Gold and come in sizes varying from 1 gram to 500 grams.  Each bar has a serial number imprinted on the Gold Bar.  Cast Gold Bullion Bars have always been a good investment.  There is a new Christmas edition containing 5 grams of 999.9 pure gold.   

With the price of Gold at its highest, now would be a good time to part with them. 

We will buy your Gold Bullion Bars for the best price.   A Gold Bar, known as Gold Bullion or a Gold Ingot, is a quantity of refined metallic Gold that can be shaped in various forms, produced under standard conditions of manufacture, labelling and record-keeping.  Larger bars are called Ingots, produced by casting molten metal into moulds.  Smaller bars are usually created through minting or stamping from rolled gold sheets.  Cast Gold Bullion Bars often have irregular shapes and uneven surfaces, making each one unique and easily recognizable.  They are generally worth less than the Minted Gold Bullion Bar, which have a smooth and even surface.  Some refineries emboss even the smallest Bars with serial numbers.  Minted Bars are typically equipped with anti temper technology, and there is also a feature known as a Kinegram, a type of hologram, often embossed directly onto a Gold Bar.  These Bars are known as Kinebars. 

The standard 400-troy ounce, or 12.4 kilogram Bar, is typically held by Central Banks across the world.  There is also a Kilobar, weighing 1,000 grams.  While most Kilobars have a flat appearance, Europeans prefer the brick-shaped Gold Bullion Bars. 

A Dore Bar is a semi-pure alloy of Gold and Silver.  Miners would create these at the site of a mine, and they would be transported to a refinery for further purifying. These Bars weighed as much as 25 kilograms.  Proportions of Gold and Silver varied.  During the 19th Century Gold Rushes, Gold Nuggets and dust were melted into crude Gold Bars called Bullion by miners.  A more accurate description was a Dore Bar with usually a higher content of Silver and other mixes than mints would accept.  The mint would refine the Dore Bars to an acceptable purity, 999 fine Gold Bullion with Silver and base metals removed.  By the time of the Californian Gold Rush, the mints were generally turning away from this process and moving towards the acid refining process developed by the chemist Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac for the French mint.  By the time of the Klondike Gold Rush mints had begun to replace Gay-Lussac’s acid process and introduced electrolysis to refine Dore Bars into 999.9 purity Gold Bullion Bars. 

The Royal Mint produced minted and cast Gold Bullion Bars with various stamped pictures on the front.  There is even a Star Wars Bullion Bar minted in both gold and silver, in weight beginning from 1 oz.