The first US nickel was a Shield nickel it was struck in 1866, next was the Liberty Head series, then the Indian Head and or Buffalo nickel and then the Jefferson series that we still use. The following data does not include Proof coins, but is for all years of each series of coins. The Jefferson series data is only up to 2009
None, since there is no such thing as a nickil. However, there are 20 nickels in a US dollar.
A standard US roll of nickels contains 40 coins.
A US nickel weighs 5 gm, while a US pound is 453.6 gm. That means 453.6 / 5 = 90.7 nickels weigh 1 pound. Rounding to the nearest whole number of coins gives 91 nickels.
According to the US mint, about 1023.60 million nickels were made in 2012. This is just over 1 billion.
US nickels are 1.95 mm thick. A US inch is 25.4 mm so you would need 25.4 / 1.95 = 13 coins.
None, since there is no such thing as a nickil. However, there are 20 nickels in a US dollar.
A standard US roll of nickels contains 40 coins.
A US pound is 453.6 grams. US nickels weigh 5.00 gm so there are 453.6/5.00 = 91 nickels, to the nearest whole number. Modern Canadian nickels weigh 3.95 gm so there are 453.6/3.95 = 115 nickels, again rounded.
One US nickels weighs 5 grams. This means it would take 97.72 nickels to make one pound of nickels. The president on the US nickel is Thomas Jefferson.
Yes. All US nickels have a nominal weight of 5 grams.
A US nickel weighs 5 gm, while a US pound is 453.6 gm. That means 453.6 / 5 = 90.7 nickels weigh 1 pound. Rounding to the nearest whole number of coins gives 91 nickels.
According to the US mint, about 1023.60 million nickels were made in 2012. This is just over 1 billion.
None, because there is no coin called a "buffalo head" nickel, and the only US nickels that ever contained silver were special "war nickels" minted from 1942 to 1945.Buffalo nickels were minted from 1913 to 1938 and are made of the same 75% copper / 25% nickel alloy used for all US nickels except war nickels.
No, the only US nickels to have silver are the "War Nickels" from 1942 to 1945
A US nickel weighs 5.0 grams and a pound is 453.6 gm, so there are 90.7 (453.6 gm / 5 gm) US nickels in one pound. For Canadian nickels, the answer is 435.6 gm / 3.95 gm = 114.8 coins.
US nickels are 1.95 mm thick. A US inch is 25.4 mm so you would need 25.4 / 1.95 = 13 coins.
520 grams of nickels is 104 nickels. (each US nickel weighs 5 grams).