It will depend when the Sol was minted.
Years Minted: 1864-1935
Number of Types: 3
Type 1 Composition: 90% Silver, 10% Copper
Type 2 & 3 Composition: 50% Silver
Diameter: 37 mm
Type 1 Weight: 25 grams (0.7234 oz. actual silver weight)
Type 2 & 3 Weight: 25 grams (0.4019 oz. actual silver weight)
TypesType 1 - Composition of 90% Silver and reverse design has the words "9 DECIMOS FINO" or "9 Tenths Fine". Minted from 1864 to 1916
Type 2 - Composition of 50% Silver. Minted from 1922 to 1923. (NO Decimos Fino words on obverse)
Type 3 - Composition of 50% Silver and reverse design has the words "5 DECIMOS FINO" or "5 Tenths Fine". Minted from 1923 to 19135
1987 is on it.
If by crunncy you mean currency, it's the Nuevo Sol (New Sol, as in Sun). About a decade ago, it was the Inti (The quechua word for Sol), and before that the Sol de Oro (Gold Sun).Hope that helped.
Soles de oro are no longer used in Peru. The latest currency is the nuevo sol. The banknote you have is obsolete and probably worth less than $1.
Less than $1 US Dollar
No. The currency in Peru is the Nuevo Sol.
Golden Sun
The currency of Peru is the Peruvian Nuevo Sol (PEN). The nuevo sol was introduced to replace the inti in 1991.For more information and images of Peruvian money, see the related link below.
No. The monetary unit of Peru is the Nuevo Sol (PEN).
Currency in Peru: nuevo sol (PEN)
The nuevo sol
nuevo sol
The Nuevo Sol.