how much does canadian nickel 1751-1951 is worth
The US and Canadian dollar values are nearly equal right now, so a Canadian nickel is worth 5 cents on either side of the border.
There is absolutely no silver in that coin.
5 cents.
It's worth 5 cents...
Canadian coins aren't usable in the US. A Canadian nickel isn't worth anything in the US. IN Canada, the 2004 nickel is worth .05 cents. However, if you can sneak it into your change one day, you'll get .05 cents worth of stuff.
Canadian quarters from 1999 and earlier were made of pure nickel and weighed about 5 grams;quarters from 2000 to present are steel with nickel plating, and weigh 4.4 grams.
It is worth about $3 in good condition and $5 in mint condition.
1000 dollars
The 1968 dollar is 100% nickel. 1967 was the last year that the canada used silver for their coins.
It's an ordinary circulation coin worth only face value.
"Nickel" is the slang name for a US or Canadian 5¢ piece, or 1/20 of a dollar. To determine the value in English currency, check a site like xe.com for the latest exchange rates between the pound sterling and either the US or Canadian dollar, then divide that number by 20. For example, if the conversion rate is $1.00 = £0.60, a nickel would be worth 0.60/20 or 3p.
None. Canada has never made a silver nickel. In fact, until recently their nickels were really made of pure nickel, unlike those in the U.S. that are mostly copper. Canada DID, however, once make a much smaller 5-cent coin in silver, but it was last minted in 1921 and was never called a nickel because it didn't have any nickel in it.