Silver is a not magnetic metal - the most highly magnetic metal is iron - so no unless the cores of the coins are iron
No silver coin is magnetic .
No.
No
No. Genuine silver dollars are made of silver and copper; neither of which are magnetic.
No. Genuine silver dollars are made of silver and copper; neither of which are magnetic.
US Trade dollars have more silver in them than Morgan dollars do. But in general the Morgans have higher values.
Dollars used for trade in the west and china minted with a high silver content
Genuine U.S. trade dollars are made of silver.
The Actual Silver Weight (ASW) is .77344oz of pure silver. All silver dollars (except Trade Dollars) from 1878 to 1935 contain the same amount of silver.
The Actual Silver Weight (ASW) is .77344oz of pure silver. All silver dollars (except Trade Dollars) from 1878 to 1935 contain the same amount of silver.
There has not been a year in which the US Mint issued only 20 silver dollars. However, in 1884 there only 10 proof Trade Dollars issued and in 1885 there were only 5 proof Trade Dollars issued.
Of course not. Fe (iron) and steel are attracted to magnets. Silver is not
No Trade Dollars were struck in 1876. First year of issue was 1878
YES... silver is NOT magnetic.