Unless you can separate them, they can't be spent so they have no value.
it would be approximately 4,535 nickels and at a total price of 226$.
c
Buffalo nickels were not struck until 1913 so your nickels (which do not have buffaloes on them, correct?) must be from the prior series called Liberty nickels. You can find a price guide at http://www.numismedia.com/fmv/prices/libnkl/pricesgd.shtml , among many such sites.
You would have to specify a PRICE for the books in question. Dollars can pay full dollars. Dimes are 10 cents and therefore you require 10 dimes to replace any dollar. Nickels are 5 cents and therefore you require 20 nickels to replace any dollar, or 2 nickels in the place of any dime. Dimes can pay any price evenly divisible by 10 cents. Nickels can pay any price evenly divisible by 5 cents.
US nickels: There are 3,200,000 nickels in 16 metric tons.A US nickel weighs 5 grams.1 metric ton is 1,000,000 grams.So you would take 1,000,000/5 (a nickel = 5 grams) and you get 200,000 Per tonAfter that, you would multiply 200,000 * 16 because you want 16 metric tons worth of nickels: 200,000 *16=320,000.Canadian nickels: There are modern Canadian nickels in 16 metric tons.Modern Canadian nickels weigh 3.95 gm.Thus there are 1,000,000 / 3.95 = 253,164.557 Canadian nickels per tonMultiplying by 16 gives 4050632.91 coins, or 4,050,633 rounded to the next whole number of nickels.
Indian head (buffalo) nickels were minted from 1913 to 1938.
Yes, 22ct weeping gold can be melted down and sold for cash at a gold buyer or refinery. The value will be based on the current market price of gold and the weight of the item being melted down. It's recommended to get quotes from multiple buyers to ensure you get the best price.
The nickels are valued at a price between $6 to $10. The exact price will depend upon the condition of the coin.
Price for foodstuffs etu, stated of shown as the cost per unit as per pound per kilogram.
The only thing special is that there are so many of them. A total of almost 3 billion were minted, the first time more than a billion nickels were made at each mint, and that remains the highest mintage of any year. 1964 nickels still show up in change regularly.Why so many nickels?When the price of silver was deregulated silver coins started to be hoarded and melted. The resulting shortage of dimes, quarters, and halves caused huge problems for stores and banks. The Mint didn't yet have a substitute for silver that would work in vending machines and coin counters, so as a stopgap they produced enormous numbers of nickels. Until the current clad composition was developed for higher denominations in 1965, it was possible to receive 10 or 15 nickels in change!
Diamonds don't melt, so your question doesn't have an answer.
In my opinion, in general no. Supply and demand drive the price.