Copies and replicas of genuine coins rarely have any added value.
The only exception would be if the copy were made from a precious metal like silver or gold, but that's very unlikely in the case of a nickel, even the wildly famous 1913 Liberty Head coin.
Nothing. Copy coins are not produced by the US mint and have no collector value at all. While some higher quality collector coins are produced using the same materials as the authentic coin (such as a 1933 double eagle copy being made in gold and a 1804 silver dollar copy being struck in silver) a nickel contains no precious metal value and if made with the exact same specifications as the US nickel, it might be worth 4-5 cents in scrap.
If it's a copy, it's not worth much of anything. At best, it's worth its metal content.
Being that it's a copy, it's not worth much of anything.
These copy's of the 1933 Double Eagle have no numismatic collectible value, most sell for $5.00 at coin shows.
The only value is what someone will pay. This stuff has no Numismatic collectible value.
Nothing. Copy coins are not produced by the US mint and have no collector value at all. While some higher quality collector coins are produced using the same materials as the authentic coin (such as a 1933 double eagle copy being made in gold and a 1804 silver dollar copy being struck in silver) a nickel contains no precious metal value and if made with the exact same specifications as the US nickel, it might be worth 4-5 cents in scrap.
If it's a copy, it's not worth much of anything. At best, it's worth its metal content.
Being that it's a copy, it's not worth much of anything.
The coin has no collectible value at all. It's a copy!
These copy's of the 1933 Double Eagle have no numismatic collectible value, most sell for $5.00 at coin shows.
Carbon Copy - 1913 was released on: USA: June 1913
The only value is what someone will pay. This stuff has no Numismatic collectible value.
What ever you can get for it. It has no numismatic value.
The word "copy" should be a giveaway that this is not a real nickel, so you are correct to suspect that it has no special value. It's probably a novelty piece made for a set of sample coin designs or something similar.
These copy's of the 1933 Double Eagle have no numismatic collectible value, most sell for $5.00 or less at coin shows.
A copy of any US coin has no numismatic value. Its principal worth is the value of the metals used to produce it plus whatever you are willing to pay for it.
"COPY" means it is not original. Copies usually have a value equal only to the materials used to make them.