A date set is one coin from each year that type of coin was made using the most common highest mintage lower value coins.
The set needs to be seen for an accurate value. A complete set of Lincoln cents from 1938 to 1959 has 62 coins in it.
Lots and lots. It is nearly impossible to say. Almost every civilization has struck numerous different types of coins, some more rare than others. To even put together a complete set of one of every type of coin struck in Great Britain would be nearly impossible, and with several millions of dollars it might be possible to get a type set of all the coins in a young nation like the US.
As of 07/2010 a proof set containing copper-nickel clad coins retails for about $13, while a Prestige set with silver coins sells for about $35.
Incomplete question - no country mentioned nor what coins are in the set.
Which country and what type of coin set?
A date set is one coin from each year that type of coin was made using the most common highest mintage lower value coins.
Please post new question. Do you mean Three (3) $5.00 coins?
Any series of coins dated from 1900 to 1999 are included in a 20th Century type set, even if they began before the year 1900 such as Indian Head cents, Liberty Head nickels and the Barber coins.
its worth around 1p i see lots of coins from 1967. Surely no 1p coins in 1967? Decimalisation was 1970. Do you mean One Old Penny coins, as wide as £2 coins?
100 coin sets run from $55.00-$70.00 retail depending on what type of album the coins are in.
How much is a 1960 Hong Kong Modern Uncirculated Type Set worth
The word "mintage" applies to all coins regardless of their metal composition. It simply means the number of coins minted for a particular year, type, variety, etc.
It depends on what you mean by "set". Do you mean a proof set or mint set in its original packaging? One of each denomination, taken from circulation? Something else? Please post a new, separate question with more-specific information.
It would depend upon which 4 coins are in the set.
A group of coins is generally referred to as a collection, a set, or a pile of coins.
If you mean the current $1 coins, unless they're in a proof or uncirculated set, they're worth exactly the amount shown on the reverse side. Feel free to spend them.