The Reserve Bank of Australia advises that the thickness of 1,000 Australian One Hundred Dollar polymer banknotes is 140.8 mm plus or minus 5%.
Therefore 100 One Hundred Dollar polymer banknotes would be 14.08 mm plus or minus 5%.
The 5% allowance is for wear and tear on circulating banknotes.
To determine the thickness of $5,000,000 in hundred-dollar bills, we first note that a single $100 bill is approximately 0.11 millimeters thick. Therefore, 50,000 $100 bills (which make up $5,000,000) would be about 5,500 millimeters thick, or roughly 5.5 meters (18 feet).
The Australian One Dollar coin weighs 9 grams, is 25mm in diameter and is 3mm thick. Figure it out.
A stack of 100 one hundred-dollar bills is approximately 0.43 inches thick. This thickness can vary slightly depending on the condition of the bills, but on average, a single bill is about 0.0043 inches thick. Therefore, multiplying by 100 gives you the total thickness for that stack.
A US dollar bill is about 75 microns thick.
To determine the total thickness of 5000 20-dollar notes, we first need to find the thickness of a single note. The thickness of a US dollar bill is approximately 0.0043 inches. Therefore, the thickness of a 20-dollar note would be the same. Multiplying the thickness of a single note by the total number of notes (0.0043 inches x 5000) gives us a total thickness of 21.5 inches.
All American bills of any denomination are printed on paper that is about 0.0043 inches thick, so a new bundle (Federal Reserve strap) of 100 bills will be 0.43 inch thick (1 cm).
To find the thickness of 93,000,000 in 50 notes, you first need to determine the thickness of each note. If we assume standard U.S. currency notes are about 0.11 millimeters thick, then 50 notes would be 5.5 millimeters thick. Therefore, 93,000,000 would consist of many stacks of 50 notes, but as a single stack, it would be approximately 5.5 millimeters thick, regardless of the total amount.
2.15mm
They are all 2 MM thick.
The Australian One Dollar coin was first issued in 1984 to replace its paper predecessor, and general circulation coins have the following specifications - One Dollar coin - has a gold appearance, weighs 9 grams, is 25 mm in diameter, is 3 mm thick, has an interrupted reeded edge and is made from 92% copper, 6% aluminum and 2% nickel. It is frequently used as a Commemorative. The Australian One Dollar coin has maintained the same specifications since its first issue and features 5 kangaroos on the reverse of non-commemorative coins.
.oo43
If you mean a real silver dollar, such as a Morgan or peace dollar the thickness is 2.4mm