No. Pennies were made of copper (Now US pennies are made of copper plated zinc) Magnets are made of iron or other ferro-magnetic metals.
No. U.S. pennies are not magnets.
Try to pick it up with a magnet.
most definitely a magnet the size of a penny has broken my mp3 i got for xmas it wont turn on now. Actually I disagree, I got my hard drive magnet just now (much more powerful than a fridge magnet) and rubbed it all over my iRiver E100 and it still works. Did the same to my mobile, Nokia 5140i. --blueuser
A paperclip attracts a magnet ,a magnet attracts a paperclip.
error very rare This is just unheard of, i was looking and found 1 myself the us mint has only ever seen one
A compass is a magnet. It reacts like a magnet.
what if
The best way to find out if it is real, simply use a magnet. It will cling to the magnet if it is a real steel penny.
No. Copper is not attracted to a magnet.
No, copper is not magnetic.
No
because the penny can't be magnetically charged.
No. No genuine US coin other than the 1943 steel penny will stick to a magnet. If you have a US coin that sticks to a magnet other than the steel penny, it is a counterfeit.
They were steel, not silver.
NO magnets arent attracted to copper
Neither the original copper or the newer version copper-zinc penny is magnetic. The 1943 steel penny was the only penny effected by a magnet.
The 1943 steel penny.
Other than the DATE it will stick to a magnet.