Yes. All US nickels have a nominal weight of 5 grams.
They weigh the same.
From 1866 to 2010 nickels weigh the same, 5 grams.
200 dollars has the same value and the same purchasing power, regardless of what combination of coins or paper bills is used to present it. If it is presented all in the form of nickels, then it requires 4,000 nickels.
They weigh the same!
All US Nickels weigh the same, 5 grams.
20 kg is 20,000 grams. A US nickel weighs 5 gm so it would take 20000/5 = 4000 US nickels to weigh 20 kg. Current Canadian nickels weigh 3.95 gm so you'd need 20000/3.95 = 5064 Canadian nickels to weigh the same amount, rounded to the next whole number of coins.
From 1866 to date all US nickels weigh the same, 5 grams.
If you think about it for a few seconds, a kilo is the weight of a liter of water (i.e. half a standard soda bottle) so 6 kg is definitely not the answer. But while 6 grams is a lot closer it's still not on the mark. A US nickel weighs exactly 5 gm, while current Canadian nickels weigh 3.95 gm.
US nickels weigh 5.00 gm so there are exactly 100 nickels in a half-kilo. Current Canadian nickels weigh 3.95 gm so there are 127 nickels in a half-kilo, rounded to the nearest whole number of coins.
You need to start with the following information:Coins are weighed in grams. US nickels weigh 5.0 gm; current Canadian nickels are 3.95 gm.That means 1000 gm of:American nickels is 1000 / 5.0 = 200 coins; the value is US$10.00Canadian nickels is 1000 / 3.95 = 253 coins (rounded to the nearest whole number); the value is CDN$12.65
Silver was only used in nickels during WWII. Every nickel 1866-1941 and 1946-present has used the same blend of 75% copper with 25% nickel.
There are no dimes in nickels, but 20 dimes have the same purchasing value as 40 nickels have.