All 2003 US nickels carry the standard portrait of Thomas Jefferson on the front and an image of his home, Monticello, on the back. None are special and none have any extra value in circulated condition.
2004 and 2005 nickels carry different designs in honor of the Lewis and Clark bicentennial, but again any that you find in change have no extra worth.
$8.95 at a novelty shop. These are made outside the mint by cutting down two real coins.
The decimal number for 1 is 1.
The melt value of something is the value of the metal itself. For example, a 1964 nickel has a melt value of 5 cents because 1.8 cents worth of nickel and 2.7 cents of copper.
5 cents.
All US nickels (except for silver war nickels) are 75% copper and 25% nickel, with a present melt value of 4.9 cents.
a 2004 nickel has nothing special about it. so it is worth its face value of 5 cents
The value of a nickel plated SW 38 Special gun depends on its condition. This gun in excellent condition is valued between 320.00 and 400.00 as of 2014.
Copper-nickel. If circulated, it has no particular special value.
15-150 usd
50 and up depending on EXACTLY what you have.
5 cents...in the United States. 0.0380536 euros 0.0608717 canadian 2.43191 rupees
50-150 USD or so
50-275 or so
the value of the nickel is 5 cent
50¢ All half dollars from 1971 to today are made of copper-nickel and have no special value.
100-360 USD or so
If you have a US nickel, it is either coated with copper or has changed color due to exposure to some chemical and has no special value. If it is a 1942 Canadian nickel, it varies from $.40 to $1.75 in circulated conditions, $3 and up in uncirculated grades. The material is called "tombac" and is an alloy of copper and zinc.