six hundred dollars
14kt hge ring gold
HGE is hard gold electroplate, so no it is not real gold. It is likely gold plate.
Heavy Gold Electroplated ... not worth anything!
Probably not. The HGE mark is an indication of "heavy gold electroplate." This means that the ring is made of some metal over which a layer of gold is plated.
its worth wearing but not selling...but wear it occasionally. it will last a while and not tarnish. its just gold plated, in inside is a metal...so if you sold it you're probably looking at 5 bucks...if that
HGE stands for heavy gold elctroplate, which means that your ring is not gold, it only has a microscopic ammount of gold ontop of some worthless metal. Even if it was gold, you didn't include the weight. People don't buy gold rings because they are collectable or unique, they buy them for EXACTLY how much GOLD is in them, they want the GOLD! There are so many of these questions on here, asking how much is my gold ring worth... How are we supposed to know if you don't include the WEIGHT of the ring??!!
It is worth nothing at all. HGE refers to heavy gold electroplated. Though 18KT refers to 18 karat gold or 75 percentage gold, 18KT HGE is worth nothing.
Probably not because the HGE mark indicates that it has heavy gold electroplate, not solid gold.
First of all, you didn't tell us whether it was a ring or a brooch or a pendant, second, HGE means hard gold electroplate. Its not gold, or a real ruby.
HGE stands for Heavy Gold Electroplate - Unfortunately it isn't worth much if anything, as the plating is very thin.
Not a lot- HGE means Heavy Gold Electroplate- it is a thin layer of gold over another metal.
The ring may be worth something to somebody, but it holds no gold value. the "10-14K" marking means 10K to 14K gold. The "HGE" marking mean "Heavy Gold Electroplate". So, altogether, the entire marking means the ring is plated with an alloy that is at least 10K, but no more than 14K, gold.Visit the link below to learn more about gold markings and silver markings.