1 cent. It's actually made of 97.5% zinc and is only copper-plated.
August 12, 2009 The value of the copper in a 1983 Lincoln Cent is .004455 cents.
A 1983 Lincoln cent is actually copper plated zinc, 1982 was the last year for copper pennies. It's just a penny.
The value for a 1951 copper cent is worth about $0.10 to $4 depending on the condtition.
A genuine 1943 copper (bronze actually) cent exceeds $100,000.00 in value.
If it's a US 1 cent coin it's zinc not copper and value is 1 cent
August 12, 2009 The value of the copper in a 1983 Lincoln Cent is .004455 cents.
A 1983 Lincoln cent is actually copper plated zinc, 1982 was the last year for copper pennies. It's just a penny.
The value for a 1951 copper cent is worth about $0.10 to $4 depending on the condtition.
A genuine 1943 copper (bronze actually) cent exceeds $100,000.00 in value.
The only steel pennies were made in 1943 to save copper for the war effort.
If it's a US 1 cent coin it's zinc not copper and value is 1 cent
It's still worth one cent.
...One cent. It is in common circulation and made out of copper coated zinc.
It's still worth one cent US.
It would have the same value as what it says on. If its 1 cent/pence it would be valued at 1 cent/pence.
A U.S. copper 1826 Coronet cent is valued from $20 up to hundreds of dollars depending on wear.
50 cents for the copper-nickel coin underneath a few atoms of gold plating. A cent or two for the plating, IF you could recover it.