No. It is all steel with copper plating.
The two coins are a ten-pence coin and a one pence-coin. The one-pence coin is the one that is not a ten-pence coin.
This could not be done, unless one of them is not a 50p, but the other is, so 50p and a 5p.
One fifty pence and one five pence, one of them is not a five pence.
The other one is !
The only British "pence" coin issued in 1816 was the Sixpence. You might see one in a museum or maybe a coin dealers.
The smallest British coin in current circulation (as legal tender) is the one pence piece which has a value of 0.01 pound sterling.Sorry this site does not do photos, but the coin is copper plated steel 1.65 mm thick and 20.3 mm in diameter with a plain edge and weighing 3.56 g.
Do an image search There is no "pence" coin, pence is the plural of penny, hence 5 one penny coins , or 1 five pence.
The Modern one pence piece and the old three pence piece
A twenty pence coin has one 'edge' with seven 'faces'
The British Penny has been made from copper-plated steel since 1992.Note that it's one penny, not "one pence". Pence is plural. "One pence" is like saying "one mice".From 1860 to 1992, British Pennies were made from bronze which, depending on the year, may have consisted of anything between 92 and 97% copper.
You've got too many "not"s. One coin is not a 5 pence because the other one is.
A 20 Pence coin is a British coin worth one fifth of a British Pound (GBP). A "nickel" is a US 5 cent coin. At current exchange rates (Jan 2011), the British 20 Pence coin is worth about 32 cents USD.