No. U.S. quarters minted in 1965 and later are mostly copper with nickel coating.
Zero. A 1966 U.S. quarter is 0% silver.
If you mean a 1966 American quarter, then none.
$50
1966 Canadian quarter is 80% silver and approximately has .1501 Troy oz of silver. So it depends what silver spot is. With silver at $48/oz it's worth $7.20
No it's not. The coin has no silver, 1964 was the last year for a US silver quarter.
yes it is and it is worth $2.70 as of 10/2008
You can test if a quarter is real silver by using a magnet; silver is not magnetic, so if the coin is attracted to the magnet, it is not real silver. You can also look for the date on the coin: quarters minted before 1965 are made of 90% silver, while those minted after are made of a copper-nickel alloy.
No. The US Mint did not produce any quarter dollars in 1933.
All of the quarters struck for circulation from 1965 to date, have NO silver and are just quarters.
No. The US Mint did not produce any quarter dollars in 1933.
Twenty five cents each. Silver-plating adds no value.
No US quarters dated 1966 are silver. The only US quarters struck in silver are dated 1964 or before with the exception of silver proof sets (most proof sets are -not- silver and silver proof sets are marked as silver) but those are dated from 1992-present.