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SCISSEL

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Q: What is waste metal called in coin production?
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Related questions

What is the name of waste metal during coin production?

The name of the waste metal is scissel


What is a Metal disc used to make a coin called?

The metal disc used to make a coin is called a "coin blank" or, more formally, a "planchet." They also used to be called "flans," but that term is no longer as widely used.


Is c coin an insulator?

yes because of the copper or metal in the coin.


What are the metals used in making a lebbo coin?

lebbo coin metal.


What is inside a coin?

Solid metal.


If you rub a coin briskly between your fingersit will not seem to become charged by frictionwhy?

because coin is made up of insulated metal thats why coin cannot charged


What does 900 stamped on a coin mean?

That number indicates the fineness or purity of the metal content. 900 means the coin is 90% of that metal.


How is a metal a metal?

if you try sticking a magnet to aluminum or coin; it can't work it's metal but non metal


How do you make coins mint?

To make a coin, you take 2 pieces of hard metal (usually steel) and engrave a reverse image of what you want the coin to look like on these pieces of metal. This is called the die. You then put the metal between the 2 dies and apply pressure to strike the coin. Ancient and medieval coins used a hammer to strike the coin (often multiple strikes were required) but modern methods use machines to strike the coin and usually only one strike is required except in high-relief and proof coins.


How is a non metal?

if you try sticking a magnet to aluminum or coin; it can't work it's metal but non metal


When selling gold coins is the price determined by the ounce plus the denomination of the coin?

Seems to be the metal coin content, of the coin.


What if a 1977 penny is a shiny silver and sticks to a magnet?

All genuine 1977 cents were struck in bronze, which is not magnetic. If your coin sticks to a magnet it has either been plated with enough nickel or other magnetic metal to stick, or it was struck in a different metal altogether. If it's a different metal, you either have a fantasy piece someone made privately, or possibly an error that's called an off-metal strike. That error occurs when a blank for a foreign coin accidentally gets mixed in with normal blanks at the Mint. Off-metal strikes can be worth a premium, but you'd need to have your coin inspected by a professional coin dealer or grader in order to tell if you have a true error, a fake, or just an altered coin.