There's a list of all coin specifications at the U.S. Mint site:
A 1975 Roosevelt Dime has the following composition: outer layers of 0.75 copper and 0.25 nickel bonded to a core of pure copper; the overall composition is about 93% copper and 7% nickel. The coin weighs 2.27 grams.
aluminum foil, dime, coper wire, penny, water
Currently they are made out 91.67% copper and 8.33% nickel but before 1965 they were made out of 90% silver and 10% copper.
Golden Dollar's overall composition:88.5% copper6.0% zinc3.5% manganese2% nickelManganese brass composition:77% copper12% zinc7% manganese4% nickel
90% silver, 10% copper. That composition was used in quarters dated up till 1964.
There was never a dime popularly called a "war dime". That term was usually applied only to those coins whose metal composition was changed due to wartime metal shortages - e.g. cents in the US and nickels in the US and Canada. Because dimes were mostly silver their composition wasn't changed, so regardless of date they're just dimes. Please see the Related Question for more information.
no the dime is made of a fake metal
a dime is a conductor
A dime is composed of a metal mixture called an alloy, which is a homogeneous mixture. The metal alloy that makes up a dime is a mixture of copper and nickel.
A dime , being made of metal , is malleable and can undergo a process that will change it's shape .
A 1975 Roosevelt Dime has the following composition: outer layers of 0.75 copper and 0.25 nickel bonded to a core of pure copper; the overall composition is about 93% copper and 7% nickel. The coin weighs 2.27 grams.
aluminium and titanium
There is NO pH of a dime or quarter or penny because money does NOT dissolve in water as being metal alloys
Ten cents. No precious metal content
Alkali is a basic, ionic salt of an alkali metal or alkaline earth metal element. Thus, the chemical composition of an alkali is: alkali metal,hydrogen,oxygen,carbon.
i think cause dime is metal
it is IRON