It contains exactly 0% silver.
There is no silver in this coin. Despite its silver appearance, it is actually composed of nickel.
yes France 1 Franc 1898-1920 Silver (.835) - 5 g - ø 23 mm
Look at the coin again the date is 1776-1976 and has no silver in it and is still only a dollar.
Assuming the coin is from France, none. These coins were struck in copper-nickel.
It appears that the first 2 Franc coin issued by Switzerland (HELVETIA" is the Latin name for Switzerland) was minted in 1850.
You didn't give the denomination, but I'm assuming you mean a 1952 Belgium 1 Franc coin. If you've got one of these, it is copper-nickel and contains no silver.
The 1941 Belgium 5 franc coin is worth about 4-5 dollars.
Quite a bit ! Swiss 5 Franc coins from 1931 to 1967 have 0.4027 ounces of real silver in.
Most likely not. You did not specify a country of origin, but most countries completely ended circulating silver coinage by the late 1960s with a few exceptions of coins with very high face values.
A 1976 commemorative Montreal olympic coin weighs 48.6000 grams and is made of .925 silver. If you do a little bit of math, that works out to be 1.4454 troy ounces of silver per coin. The price of silver is constantly changing. Its value at this minute is $13.25 per ounce. In terms of silver value, a 1976 Montreal silver commemorative coin is worth $19.15.
The coin is a franc.
The coin has 40% silver in it or .3161oz of pure silver.