NICKEL, not "nickle"
And not a 1932 cent, either. All wheat cents except for 1943 steel "war pennies" were made of bronze, an alloy of 95% copper and 5% tin/zinc.
If your coin is silvery in color it's almost certainly been plated for use in jewelry or similar. That makes it a damaged coin with no collector value.
A 1943 penny could be a "steel penny" as they were made of steel due to copper being needed for other wartime purposes. Nickels were made of 35% silver during WWII. If a 1943 penny and nickel were mixed, it would potentially be an error as they wouldn't have been in circulation together due to their different compositions.
The penny is made of copper, which gives it its distinctive reddish-brown color, whereas other coins are made of different metals like nickel, zinc, and copper-plated zinc. Over time, the penny's color may change due to oxidation and wear.
It is made of copper and nickel. A 1949 NICKEL is made from copper & nickel.
A US Nickel weighs 5 grams. A penny weighs 2.5.
American nickels are made of 75% copper and 25% nickel Canadian nickels used to be pure nickel but are now made out of steel.
the 1861 Confederate penny was made of copper or nickel
move the penny on the far right over to the other side on the left and then move the 1st nickel over to the right...hence penny penny penny nickel nickel
If you mean a "Buffalo" nickel, none were made in 1922, 1932 or 1933. Check the date and post new question.
There are no British general circulation Pennies made from cupro nickel, from 1860 to 1967 they were all made from bronze. If you have a cupro nickel penny, it has been plated and is worthless as a collectible.
I have a nickel that is a color of a penny I have a nickel how much is it worth
Please look at the date again and post new question. No U.S. nickels were made in 1932.
It has to be either a penny or a nickel but not both. US cents dated 1903 were made of bronze and nickels were (and still are) made of an alloy of copper and nickel.Please check again and post a new question.
Only the Liberty Nickel had the Roman numeral "V" on its reverse. The US Mint never issued a penny with a large "V" on the reverse.
The nickel 'nicked' the penny. At least that's wat i thought.
Pennies in 1941 were mostly copper, not nickel, and they're worth about 5 cents.
PENNY
The size