Sure, you can take any coins you want to the Philippines. You probably won't be able to spend them though.
In the Philippines the last year of silver coins was ... 1945 10 centavos 1945 20 centavos 1947 50 centavos 1967 1 peso
The Philippines have had Peso coins and also Dollar coins when they were occupied by the US.
Ebay can be a good place to sell coins. If you don't want to do that take it to a coin collector.
Not many fake coins are made from real silver or gold. Take it to a jeweler to be tested, most will do this for you.
it is illegal in Mexico to take coins to other countries
No, banks do not usually buy silver coins. However, you can always go to a silver and gold dealer and exchange your precious metals for hard cash there.
All coins come from a mint. Casino coins are sometimes solid silver.
You could take them to some banks and get silver dollars or other silver coins for them. There were also places that would give you $1 worth of silver bullion.
No British circulating coin has contained any silver since 1946. From 1919/1920 to 1946, all British silver coins contained 50% silver. Prior to 1919/1920, all British silver coins were made from sterling silver or, 92.5% silver.
none 5 Centavos were 471 in Proof only 5 Pesos none made 5 Pisos none made Silver 1905 coins were 10 and 20 and 50 Centavos and 1 Peso only
There were proof sets made in 1974 and 1975 where all 8 of the coins were silver, and proof sets made during those years when none of them were silver. Assuming that your coins are in a set, check the 1 Cent coin - if it looks silver, then all the coins in the set are silver; if it looks bronze, then none of the coins in the set are silver.
Just recently with the advent of bullion coins such as the American Silver Eagle. Coins intended for circulation were never 100% silver because silver is simply too soft of a metal for coinage. They were 90% silver in American coins until 1964 for dimes, quarters and half dollars, but other than bullion coins, no coins are made of 100% silver.