It would be possible to make almost any object to a weight 175 gm.
It depends on the date. Modern "golden" dollars and Anthony dollars weigh 8.1 gm Eisenhower dollars weigh 22.7 gm Peace, Morgan, and Seated Liberty dollars weigh 26.7 gm
Modern brass and older SBA $1 coins weigh 8.1 gm. Copper-nickel Eisenhower dollars weigh 22.7 gm True silver dollars (those made up till 1935) weigh 26.7 gm
175
175lbs weighs 79.4kg
In unworn condition, 6.25 gm. Current copper-nickel quarters weigh 5.67 gm.
1 cup is 250 gm. 175 gm is about 3/4 of a cup.
One cup is 250 gm. So 175 gm is 175/250, which is roughly 7/10 or very close to 3/4 of a cup.
1 ml = 1 gm so 175 grams is 175 militres
That's not a well-formed question because you could come up with lots of different combinations that add to 16 oz. Cents (1983 and later) weigh 2.5 gm Nickels weigh 5.00 gm. Dimes weigh 2.27 gm Quarters weigh 5.67 gm Halves weigh 11.34 gm Dollars (1979 and later) weigh 8.1 gm There are 453.6 gm in a pound, so you can do all sorts of juggling to get close.
javelin weigh 175-320
It depends on the date. Modern "golden" dollars and Anthony dollars weigh 8.1 gm Eisenhower dollars weigh 22.7 gm Peace, Morgan, and Seated Liberty dollars weigh 26.7 gm
175 without converter
Modern "golden" dollars and Anthony dollars weigh 8.1 gm All US paper bills weigh 1 gm
1 cup is about 250 gm of sugar. -So 175 gm is about 2/3 of a cup
You would need metal cutters. US nickels weigh 5.00 gm so one-fifth of a single coin would weigh 1 gm. Current Canadian nickels weigh 3.95 gm so approximately one-quarter of a nickel would weigh 1 gm.
1 cup is 250 gm. - So 175 gm is about 2/3 of a cup.
Modern brass and older SBA $1 coins weigh 8.1 gm. Copper-nickel Eisenhower dollars weigh 22.7 gm True silver dollars (those made up till 1935) weigh 26.7 gm