For example, Argentina 10 Pesos (1962-1968) was nickel-clad steel
- so though outside is nickel, the magnet attracts the steel inside.
Need to know the country - many issue Peso coins.
Aluminum is not magnet meatal and cannot be a magnet.
by hammering a metal at the magnet xD
You can pull the cord from the magnet to make it weaker so it wont pick up as many items you think it will
There are two possibilities: > The coin is a fake. > It's an "off metal" strike. Back then the Mint had contracts to make coins for a number of foreign countries, and sometimes a blank for one of those coins would accidentally get mixed in with blanks for U.S. coins. Either way you'd have to take the coin to an expert who could examine it in person.
In general, magnets are brittle and will break before they bend. And yes, refrigerator magnets bend, but in them the magnetic material is powdered. But if we took a bar magnet and bent it, we'd have a horseshoe magnet. It's not quite that simple to make a horseshoe magnet, but it isn't too tough, either.
The five coins are 3 quarters and 2 dimes.
to make kitchen utensils to make jewellery to make coins to make kitchen utensils to make jewellery to make coins
Five dimes and ten nickels.
Five x 2 Pence coins = 10 Pence
two quarters and three pennies
20 quarters
One nickel and five pennies.
Ten nickels, five pennies
Two dimes and five pennies make 25 cents -- seven coins in all.
There are 5C3 = (5*4*3)/(2*1) = 30 combinations.
Four.
Two dimes + two nickels+ five pennies 20+10+5