The other one is !
A Two Pence coin weighs 7.12 grams. There are 50 Two Pence coins in a Pound. One Pound worth of Two Pence coins weighs 356 grams.
Other than for commemorative 50 Pence coins, Britannia has been on the reverse of the 50 Pence coin since it was first issued in 1969 until 2008 when the new design British coins were issued.
You could get 50 one pence coins.
The British 20 Pence and 50 Pence coins are both heptagons.
This could not be done, unless one of them is not a 50p, but the other is, so 50p and a 5p.
With the exception of the 20 and 50 Pence coins all British coins are presently round. The 20 and 50 Pence coins are heptagonal or seven sided.
It depends on what question you are asking: When was a coin with the denomination of Two Pence first used in Britain? -- The silver Two Pence (or Half Groat) coin was used in Britain as far back as 1351 as a circulating coin, and continues to this day as a part of the four-coin Maundy Money set. When was the large copper Two Pence coin minted? -- The "Cartwheel" Two Pence (so called because at about two inches in diameter, close to a quarter inch thick, and weighing the better part of two ounces, it was almost as big as a cart's wheel) was produced only for a single year in 1797. It was found to be too large and heavy for daily use and was quickly eliminated. When was the currently circulating decimal Two Pence coin first issued? -- The first of the decimal coinage in Britain (100 pence to the Pound, as compared to the old Lsd [Pounds-Shillings-Pence] system) were produced in 1968 - they were 5 and 10 Pence coins. The first Two Pence coin was not produced until 1971 - it was called Two New Pence from 1971 through 1981, and Two Pence from 1982 onward.
There are no British 50 Pence coins considered to be rare. In circulated condition, they are worth 50 Pence. For a 50 Pence coin to have any collector value associated with it, it would need to be a "proof" or "mint condition" coin in its original packaging.
All Eire (Irish) 50 Pence coins were made from a copper-nickel alloy.
No. The "New Pence" coins are British, Canada has their own currency. The British 5, 10 and 50 "New Pence" coins are no longer legal tender in Britain.
The coin is called a "50 Pence" coin. The term "50 New Pence" was last used in 1981.
Such a coin does not exist. The British 50 New Pence coin was first issued in 1969. The larger pre-1998 50 Pence coins were withdrawn from circulation and demonetised in 1998. So, unless they are part of a Proof or Uncirculated mint set or are individual Proof or Uncirculated coins and in absolute mint condition, they have little or no value.