I ordered it from one of the few reputable bullion internet dealers and it arrived today. I busted out my period table which lists the density of Palladium at 12 grams per Cubic Centimeter, my kitchen scale, which confirmed the weight at the correct 1 Troy Ounce (= 31 grams), and my caliper.
I took the measurements in my caliper, converted to metric, used the cylinder volume formula, and the calculated density of the coin is around 9.5 grams/cm^3.
That's significantly different from 12. Nickel has a density of 8.9 and Silver 10.5... so in theory if this is a counterfeit coin, it could be an alloy of nickel and silver.
I'm sure this company would make good if it is counterfeit, and they'd probably be amazed anyone would counterfeit a palladium coin (although if you think about it, it's a good one to counterfeit because the dimensions aren't something I could easily find on Google in a few minutes).
I actually found one website that lists the alleged dimensions of this coin, and it's actually bigger in diameter by 4mm and thinner... interestingly enough, with those listed dimensions using my formula, it also gives a density of 9.5 grams/cm^3.
Is there any way I can see a listing of what this coin is supposed to measure? Or what the density is supposed to be? Wikipedia lists Palladium at 12 grams/cm^3 and I can imagine the volume estimation I performed is off slightly due to the face of the coin having markings, but that shouldn't lead to a nearly 30% difference in density.
This is all just academic because as I was measuring my palladium coin, while on my boat, it fell off the side into the water and is lost. However, in case I buy another one, this information might be useful
