US nickels weigh 5.00 gm so 1 kg contains 1000/5 = 200 coins, or $10.00
Modern Canadian nickels weigh 3.95 gm so 1 kg = 253 coins (rounded to the nearest whole number), worth $12.65
One nickels is worth 5 cents so 19 nickels are worth 95 cents.
$50,000
1 kilogram of lead is worth about one dollar for every kilogram. Lead is very abundant and not worth very much.
20 Nickels
One bank box contains $100 worth of nickels, which is 2,000 coins.
There are 20 nickels in 1 dollar.
One bank box of nickels is $100, which is 2,000 nickels.
There were nearly 300 million 1982-P Jefferson nickels minted. One is worth 5 cents.
One Kilogram
Nickels are 5 cents each so if you have 4 nickels and you're trying to find the total you take 5x4=20.
One U.S. Dollar is equal to one hundred cents, and one U.S. nickel is worth five cents. Therefore there are twenty nickels in a dollar, or forty nickels in two dollars. 20 nickels = 1 dollar 40 nickels = 2 dollars.
What you saw as an "E" is not a mint mark, and is actually an "F", the monogram of the coin's designer James Fraser. The mint mark on buffalo nickels is under the words FIVE CENTS. Plain (no mint mark) and "S" 1936 nickels are worth a dollar or two in average condition. "D" coins are worth slightly more.