The percentage of silver is zero. None. Nada. Zilch. Those coins are 75% copper, 25% nickel. During WW 2 some US nickels were 35 percent silver. But not in 1970.
Zero percent. The name is a misnomer; German silver, or nickel silver, is an alloy of approximately 60% copper, 20% nickel and 20% zinc; it doesn't contain any silver.
No, nickel is an element. Silver is another element. Neither are alloys, silver only contains silver, nickel only contains nickel. "German silver", which is not actually silver, does contain nickel. It's a silver-colored alloy of nickel, copper and zinc.
No silver in a 1959 nickel.
Sterling silver is 92.5% silver with 7.5% copper and no nickel.
Nickel silver is an alloy of copper, nickel and zinc, and it was used to make 'silver' coins that were previously made in silver or 50% silver. British coins were silver up to 1921 and 50% silver until 1946, and then they were made of nickel silver. Sterling silver is 92.5% pure silver.
It Is about 1 dollar. There is no silver in that coin. There was 90 percent prior to 1964 and 1965 to 1970 was 40 . It is now copper nickel clad
The United States did not produce quarters from silver in 1970, only ones from an alloy of copper and nickel.
Zero percent. The name is a misnomer; German silver, or nickel silver, is an alloy of approximately 60% copper, 20% nickel and 20% zinc; it doesn't contain any silver.
No. The 1970 British Halfcrown was minted as a Proof FDC coin only in cupro-nickel.
All U.S. nickels (except for silver "war" nickels 1942-1945) are 75% copper and 25% nickel.
The 1964 is 90% silver and 1965-1970 are 40% silver. All coins from 1971 to date are copper-nickel
The United States five cent Jefferson nickel is composed of 75 percent copper and only 25 percent nickel. Since a Jefferson nickel weights 5.0 grams, there is 1.25 grams of nickel metal in the five cent piece.
None. It is copper-nickel. Half dollars stopped containing any silver after 1970 for circulation issues.
No, nickel is an element. Silver is another element. Neither are alloys, silver only contains silver, nickel only contains nickel. "German silver", which is not actually silver, does contain nickel. It's a silver-colored alloy of nickel, copper and zinc.
Copper-nickel coins for the dime and quarter started with coins dated 1965. The half-dollar remained 40% silver from 1965-1970 when it was changed in 1971 to copper-nickel removing all the silver of it.
From 1965-1969 the Kennedy half dollar was the only circulating US coin containing silver and that was the 40% issue. From 1970 to date all circulating coins are copper-nickel except the Lincoln cent.
...If it is nickel silver it contains no silver. It is rather an alloy of nickel and copper to create the look of silver.