The silver nickels are worth about $1.50 in scrap silver if circulated or up to about $3-4 if in excellent condition. The steel penny is worth about 2-3 cents if circulated and up to a buck or two if in brilliant uncirculated.
Do you mean copper? If so, all US nickels except the War Nickels (1942-1945) are made from 75% copper and 25% nickel. Your 1999 is just a nickel.
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.
Depending on the country, coins can be made out of various combinations of copper, nickel, steel, zinc, aluminium, manganese, and other metals. Copper, nickel, and steel are the most common.
All 2010 US nickels were struck in the standard cupronickel alloy. A nickel that appears to be made of copper could have been discolored by heat or chemical exposure, or it might be copper-plated. The latter is a very common high-school chemistry experiment.
right now the metal value in an ounce of nickel is only worth about $.50 cents thanks to the recent econemy. However, considering most 1 ounce copper coins sell for $1.75 each when they are only worth $.14 cents in copper, and nickel is worth over 3 times the value of copper, I would'nt be suprised if an ounce of pure nickel in a nice coin form sold for $5 or $6 an ounce.
It is made of copper and nickel. A 1949 NICKEL is made from copper & nickel.
Nickel cannot replace copper in copper II sulfate because nickel is higher in the electromotive series than copper.
nickel and copper are elements that can be magnetized
Both nickels and dimes are composed of Copper and Nickel. A dime, however, is 91.67% Copper and 8.33% Nickel, while a nickel is 75% Copper and 25% Nickel. Since Copper is a bit denser than Nickel, and a dime contains relatively more Copper, than a dime would be denser than a nickel.
mostly copper and nickel. a nickel is made mostly of copper. in fact, it is 75% copper and around 25% nickel!
Copper-nickel is an alloy of copper and nickel which have different densities. You need to know the proportions of each metal in the alloy to determine its density.
No - copper is a better conductor than nickel.
cupro-nickels, there exists a range of different copper nickel alloys that possess different properties and hence are suited to a range of different applications. Some of the better known copper nickel alloys include: · Copper with 10% nickel · Copper with 30% nickel · Copper with 25% nickel with 0.05-0.4% manganese · Copper with 45% nickel (also known as constantan) All copper nickel alloys consist of only one phase as the copper nickel binary system exhibits complete solid solubility.
copper has more protons than nickel
it means a load of crappy smelling stuff is released
copper has more protons than nickel
copper has more protons than nickel