The Mint switched to metric units for all coin specifications several years ago. See the Related Link for a list of current coins.
The diameter of a quarter is 24.26 mm (0.955 in).
Meter.... or more likely millimeters
The US coin "quarter" (25 cents) is 0.955" in diameter, 0.069 inches thick
AUS. quarter is 24.26 mm in diameter. Multiply by pi to get the circumference.(second person) what is the answer stupid!
around 7/8 of an inch (almost one inch)MoreCircular objects have a diameter but not length, so the question isn't meaningful as phrased. Second, US coins have been measured in metric units rather than English units for over 2 decades. According to the US Mint the diameter of a quarter is 24.26 mm
The diameter of a quarter is 24.26 mm (0.955 in).
The diameter of a United States 25 cent (quarter) coin is 2.426 centimetres, or 24.26 millimetres.
Meter.... or more likely millimeters
The US coin "quarter" (25 cents) is 0.955" in diameter, 0.069 inches thick
The US coin "quarter" (25 cents) is 0.955" in diameter, 0.069 inches thick
AUS. quarter is 24.26 mm in diameter. Multiply by pi to get the circumference.(second person) what is the answer stupid!
around 7/8 of an inch (almost one inch)MoreCircular objects have a diameter but not length, so the question isn't meaningful as phrased. Second, US coins have been measured in metric units rather than English units for over 2 decades. According to the US Mint the diameter of a quarter is 24.26 mm
It isn't. The US mint has never made gold quarters, your coin is plated assuming the coin is the same diameter as a normal quarter. Your coin is only worth 25 cents.
The thickness of a quarter is 1.75 mm or 0.069 inches. A quarter is worth 25 cents and has a mass of 5.67 g.
the quarter
No. However, if the diameter of the coin is comparable in magnitude to the height from which it is tossed, then it will affect the outcome. This could be relevant for oversized dummy coins - a quarter meter or so in width.
A US quarter has a diameter equal to 0.00002426 km