Not a whole lot because they are easily found in circulation, they contain no silver (the only nickel to contain silver were the war nickels dated 1942-1945 with a large mintmark over the Monticello) there is a key date, however, the 1950-D which you can buy in mint state for around $20. The rest of the dates bring little premium over face value (a dealer might pay 7 or 8 cents for them)
IF such a coin existed it would be a great rarity, but the only US nickels that ever contained silver were made during WWII, and no circulating US coin has contained silver since the 1960s.Like all other current nickels your coin is made of an alloy of 25% nickel and 75% copper. It has no added value in circulated condition.
There were no nickels made in the USA until 1866.
Sorry, no US nickels dated 1814 the first one was 1866.
The only years silver was used in US nickels was 1942-1945, the coin is face value.
None have any silver value. US nickels made from 1866 to mid-1942 and from 1946 to the present are made of a copper-nickel alloy, not silver.
None, because all buffalo nickels are made of the same 75% copper / 25% nickel alloy as current US nickels. The only US nickels that ever contained any silver were special "war nickels" made during 1942-45.
You need to start with the following information:Coins are weighed in grams. US nickels weigh 5.0 gm; current Canadian nickels are 3.95 gm.That means 1000 gm of:American nickels is 1000 / 5.0 = 200 coins; the value is US$10.00Canadian nickels is 1000 / 3.95 = 253 coins (rounded to the nearest whole number); the value is CDN$12.65
You need to start with the following information:Coins are weighed in grams. US nickels weigh 5.0 gm; current Canadian nickels are 3.95 gm.A US ounce is 28.35 gm so 2 ounces = 28.35*2 = 56.70 gramsThat means 2 US ounces of:American nickels is 56.70 / 5.0 = 11 coins (rounded to the nearest whole number); the value is US$0.55Canadian nickels is 56.70 / 3.95 = 14 coins (also rounded); the value is CDN$0.70
You need to start with the following information:Coins are weighed in grams. US nickels weigh 5.0 gm; current Canadian nickels are 3.95 gm.A US pound is 453.6 gm so 10 pounds = 453.6*10 = 4536 gramsThat means 10 US pounds of:American nickels is 4536 / 5.0 = 907 coins (rounded to the nearest whole number); the value is US$45.35Canadian nickels is 4536 / 3.95 = 1148 coins (also rounded); the value is CDN$57.40
US nickels weigh 5.00 gm so there are exactly 100 nickels in a half-kilo. Current Canadian nickels weigh 3.95 gm so there are 127 nickels in a half-kilo, rounded to the nearest whole number of coins.
You need to start with the following information:Coins are weighed in grams. US nickel weigh 5.0 gm; current Canadian nickel are 3.95 gm.A US ounce is 28.35 gmThat means 1 US ounce of:American nickels is 28.35 / 5.0 = 6 coins (rounded to the nearest whole number); the value is US$0.30Canadian nickels is 28.35 / 3.95 = 7 coins (also rounded); the value is CDN$0.35
Coins are weighed in grams so it's necessary to convert US pounds to grams. Each pound is 453.592 gm so 3 pounds is 1360.77 gm. A US nickel weighs 5.00 gm so 3 pounds would be 1360.77 / 5.00 = 272 nickels, rounded to the nearest whole number. Each coin is worth 5 cents so the total value would be 272*5 = 1360 cents, or $13.60 Modern Canadian nickels weigh 3.95 gm so the calculations are 1360.77 / 3.95 = 344 coins worth $17.20
There's no such coin. The first US nickels were made in 1866 and the first Canadian nickels were issued in 1922.
IF such a coin existed it would be a great rarity, but the only US nickels that ever contained silver were made during WWII, and no circulating US coin has contained silver since the 1960s.Like all other current nickels your coin is made of an alloy of 25% nickel and 75% copper. It has no added value in circulated condition.
All US nickels (except for silver war nickels) are 75% copper and 25% nickel, with a present melt value of 4.9 cents.
If you think about it for a few seconds, a kilo is the weight of a liter of water (i.e. half a standard soda bottle) so 6 kg is definitely not the answer. But while 6 grams is a lot closer it's still not on the mark. A US nickel weighs exactly 5 gm, while current Canadian nickels weigh 3.95 gm.
There were no nickels made in the USA until 1866.