Some are, yes.
Yes, nails have been made of nickel as well as other metals, usually steel but also aluminum, iron, or brass. Sometimes nails may be plated with nickel.
Have bever seen one that was original.
Never made in SS by S&W. Nickel was an option.
the model 36 did come nickel finish. I had one. But don't recall seeing any with the shroud
not military produced lugers. however, some people elected to nickel plate their luger causing the value to go down as much as 30%............
if your date of 1883 alludes to a trapdoor, then NO. however, some firearms owners did and still do have their firerms nickel plated and that reduces value greatly.
A 1973 silver penny was never minted or issued. There are some aroung, but they have been silver or nickel plated after they were put into circulation.
No.As a matter of fact I have no records of Winchester ever making a model 6!Could you be thinking of the Winchester model of 1906 .22cal.rifle?
Most likely after market. 50-250 USD
Not in the US. Except during WWII, all US nickels are actually 75% copper and only 25% nickel. "War nickels" minted from 1942 to 1945 were composed of an alloy of silver, copper, and manganese because nickel was needed for the war effort. Canadian nickels, however, were made of 99+% nickel from their introduction in 1922 till the end of the 20th century when the composition was changed to plated steel.
No genuine US silver dollars were ever made of plated base metal. Copies and fantasy pieces are often made that way, but real US dollar coins are made of the following metals:Up to 1935 : These are true silver dollars made of 90% silver and 10% copper1971-81 and 1999 : Not silver, but 75% copper and 25% nickel outer layers, bonded to a pure copper core2000-present : "golden" dollars made of manganese brass.
Among the lowest quality firearms ever built in a factory, value of a specimen in excellent condition would be $25-$50.