No, Nickels are made from a mixture of 25% Nickel and 75% Copper.
no, they aren't real silver
None of the Buffalo nickels (1913-1938) were struck in silver.
No, they don't. US nickels are made of copper and nickel. The only ones that DO contain silver are war nickels, minted 1942-1945.
No. The U.S. nickel is made from, ironically, nickel and copper. (That's how it got the name.) The only nickels that ever contained silver were the famous "war nickels" minted during WWII when nickel was a strategic metal. All other nickels are made of an alloy of 75% copper and 25% nickel.
No, you cannot melt 1964 US nickels for silver. From 1965 onward, US nickels have been composed of a copper-nickel alloy. The 1964 US nickel is made of 75% copper and 25% nickel, not silver.
no, they aren't real silver
No, the only US nickels to have silver are the "War Nickels" from 1942 to 1945
None of the Buffalo nickels (1913-1938) were struck in silver.
Never. They're called nickels for a reason. The only U.S. nickels to contain any silver at all, at 35%, were "war" nickels dated 1942-1945. Nothing before or after was made of silver.
During 1942-45 nickels were made with 35% silver to save copper for the war effort.
No, they don't. US nickels are made of copper and nickel. The only ones that DO contain silver are war nickels, minted 1942-1945.
None. The only nickels with any silver in them were made from 1942 to 1945.
Yes, from 1942-1945 nickels were made with 35% silver. Look for a large P, S or D mintmark over the Monticello. Some 1942 nickels don't have this large mintmark over it and are not made out of silver.
Only the "War Nickels" of 1942 to 1945 were made with a silver content of 35%
None have any silver value. US nickels made from 1866 to mid-1942 and from 1946 to the present are made of a copper-nickel alloy, not silver.
No.
1964