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Being made of 90% silver, this quarter would be valued at $3.81 for its silver value alone. (as of 09/22/2010 price of silver at $21.09 and ounce). If the con was in good shape and not worn it would be valued much higher.
The silver melt value of the dimes are about $2 each and the quarter melt value is about $5.45 so the scrap melt value would be about $11.45.
Assuming it's worn from circulation, it would be worth around $3 for its silver content.
Sorry! The US mint never made solid silver coins. It would be too hard.
Yes, in 1965 some coins were made like that, in error, of course. A blank planchet from 1964 was stamped in 1965, resulting in a silver 1965. It's also possible that the coin was plated. Get a good scale; a silver quarter weighs about 6.25 gm while a plated copper-nickel quarter would weigh about 5.7 gm. FWIW, it wouldn't be a "misprint" though, it would be a "mis-strike". Bills are printed, coins are struck or minted.
Being made of 90% silver, this quarter would be valued at $3.81 for its silver value alone. (as of 09/22/2010 price of silver at $21.09 and ounce). If the con was in good shape and not worn it would be valued much higher.
The silver melt value would be around $2.60.
13 dollars
No, clad is used in the coin collecting community talking about the Copper and Nickel "sandwich" current, non-silver, coins have. So a clad quarter by definition would not have any silver because a clad quarter is a quarter with no silver. However, quarters were made of silver before 1965 so any quarter dated 1964 and earlier contains 90% silver, but those coins would not be considered "clad".
You don't have a pure silver quarter as the US has never minted a pure silver (99.9% pure or higher) silver quarter. Instead what you have is a 90% silver quarter which would be dated 1964 or prior. The value depends on a number of factors including the date, the mintmark and the condition. But a silver quarter is worth $5-6 in scrap silver regardless of type or condition, however some quarters can be worth significantly more.
It silver was valued at $33.39 per oz 85 ounces would be worth $2838.15.
I would guess that it is worth a dollar. I don't think there is a Wisconsin dollar however.. are you referring to a quarter coin?
1932 - 1964 Silver Quarter is 90% silver Quarters after 1964 are copper nickel clad, there is no silver. only the 1/2 dollars or "50 cent" pieces from 1965-1970 are 40% silver. There was a 1976 silver quarter as well as the proof silver state quarters.
Barber quarters are made of 90% silver and 10% copper. The silver weight would be 5.625 grams.
Unless the quarter is in mint-state or a proof, the value would be the melt value of the silver in the coin which is $3.80ish as of this time of writing, but changes depending on the spot price of silver.
All of the quarters struck for circulation from 1965 to date, have NO silver and are just quarters.
It would depend on the quality of the diamond. Obviously a quarter carat is smaller than a third but if the third carat is of poor quality and the quarter is superior quality then the quarter would be worth more.Another AnswerEvery diamond is valued by its carat weight, its colour, its clarity and its cut.