Unless they are in Brilliant Uncirculated condition (in which case they may be worth half a dollar or so), they are worth no more than ten cents.
No, dimes dated 1965 and later are not silver and unless in mint packaging are only worth 10 cents.
Well honey, 3 dimes are worth 30 cents and 1 nickel is worth 5 cents, so together they make 35 cents. That's not enough to buy you a cup of coffee these days, but it's still better than nothing!
they were made that way
3 cents. It's an ordinary penny that was plated. The US has never made silver cents. Among other things they would have been worth more than dimes!
To determine which is worth more, we need to calculate the total value of each set of coins. 25,723 dimes would be worth 25,723 * $0.10 = $2,572.30. 231,524 pennies would be worth 231,524 * $0.01 = $2,315.24. Therefore, 25,723 dimes are worth more than 231,524 pennies.
yes
There were over 856,000,000 of these dimes produced, assuming you don't have an error coin of some kind, these dimes are worth only ten cents, they are struck on cupro-nickel blanks just like dimes today are minted with and are not silver or any other metal worth more than face value.
More than 25.
A kilogram is about 2.2 pounds , a kg. of dimes would be worth 2.2 times more than a lb.
Dimes dated 1965 and later are worth 10 cents if they came from change. Dimes dated 1964 and earlier are worth at least $1 for the silver they contain but many are worth much more than that as collectibles. You have to know their dates and mint marks though. If you have specific coins to value, please post new questions, one per date and mint mark.
1 cent. It's plated. Think about it for a few seconds - pennies are larger than dimes, so a silver penny would be worth more than 10 cents!