5.6552 g., 0.9250 Silver .1682 oz. ASW Ruler: George IV
The above info is from the definitive Krause Standard Catalog of World Coins. The ASW (Actual Silver Weight) of this coin is .1682 ounces, and right now (11/21/13) the price of an ounce is $19.92. So the total silver value is $3.35
Scrap silver is silver jewelry, coins, utensils or other items with little collector value and is sold for simply the silver content in the items.
Assuming you mean a British shilling, about 10 cents or so. 1948 shillings have no silver and are very common.
The British Shilling has never been made from gold, and has always been made from silver. From 1920 onwards, the Shilling and all other British silver coins, were debased from Sterling silver (92.5%) to 50% silver.
Just the scrap value of the silver ascertained by weighing it.
It is worth $5-6 in silver scrap. It is 90% silver.
About $2 for silver scrap regardless of the condition.
About $4.50-$5 in silver scrap. They are 40% silver and generally sell only for scrap value regardless of their condition.
No collection value but is has a scrap silver value of about 10 bucks.
The Shilling coin was minted in most years of the reign of George II. Can you be more specific about which particular year you might be referring to?
Silver and copper alloy. A sixpence was a silver coin equal in value to six pennies, or pence. Under the British pre-decimal pound/shilling/pence (£sd) system, a pound was valued at 240 pence. One pound was equal to 20 shillings and a shilling was equal to 12 pence. Up to the reign of George V, all silver coins had a silver content of 92.5% silver and 7.5% copper, called sterling silver, which was the standard set by Henry II. In 1920, during the reign of George V, the silver content of all British silver coins was reduced to 50%.
No great collector value, especially since it is damaged. They were made from sterling silver (92.5%), so you may get the value of the silver.
50 cents