16
In 2010, the Royal Mint produced the following British general circulation coins - Two Pound coins - 2,015,000 One Pound coins - 38,505,000 50 Pence coins - 510,090 20 Pence coins - 91,700,500 10 Pence coins - 25,320,500 5 Pence coins - 180,250,500 2 Pence coins - 38,000,000 1 Penny coins - 421,002,000 A total of 797,303,590 British coins. These figures do not include any of the Proof or bullion coins or the 2012 Olympic commemorative coins. Neither does it include the coins made for the 16 other countries the Royal Mint is contracted to produce coins for.
£1 = 20, 5 pence pieces. So £10 = 200. 5 pence pieces.
You can't use 4 coins to make 16 pounds 51 pence
There are multiple ways to make one pound, depending on the type of currency you are using. For example, in British pound sterling, you can use one coin worth one pound, two coins worth 50 pence each, four coins worth 25 pence each, or 100 coins worth 1 penny each.
It depends which currency you are working in.
British coins of copper appearance, the 1 and 2 Pence coins, are made from copper plated steel. British coins of silver appearance, the cupro-nickel 5, 10 and 50 Pence coins, are made from 75% copper and 25% nickel. British 20 Pence coins, are made from 84% copper and 16% nickel.
12 nickels, 4 dimes.
16 coins that equal exactly one dollar are 10 pennies,2quartars, and 4 dimes. Or 3 quarters,10 pennies, and 3 nickels.
16%
13+16=29 40-29=11
16 trillion 1 pence coins makes £160,000,000,000, or one hundred and sixty billion pounds.