i dnt knw tell me i want to know
The old South African 50 cent coin, particularly valuable, is the 1965 minting. This coin is sought after by collectors due to its lower mintage and historical significance. Additionally, the 1980 50 cent coin is also valuable, especially if it is in uncirculated condition. Coins from these years can fetch higher prices in the numismatic market.
These are often found in circulated condition in coin dealers' misc. foreign coin bins for 25 cents.
Since 2006, there's a taniwha on the 10 cent coin, there's a kiwi on the $1 coin, and a white heron on the $2 coin. Before 2006, there was a kiwi on the 20 cent coin.
Yes Sacajawea is on a dollar coin
She didn't really pick Elya said forget about it because she was saying who should i pick and so he left without the pig and then forgot about madame Zeroni and went to America
A cupronickel coin is a coin that is made of an alloy of copper and nickel. Current US dimes, quarters and half dollars have an outer cladding of cupronickel, while 5-cent pieces are solid cupronickel. Many British and Australian coins are also struck in cupronickel. A blend of 75% copper/25% nickel is frequently used for coins because its color resembles silver while the high copper content allows it to be easily struck in coin presses. Other percentages are sometimes used; for example British 20p coins are made in an 84/16 ratio of copper to nickel.
ferritic stainless steel for 50 & 100 paise , cupronickel for 5 rupee coin
If it is a "Silver" coin, it will say so on the case it came in.
Yes - his picture was used on large-size (38 mm) cupronickel dollars minted from 1971 to 1978.
Fifty cents, the coin is not rare or is not otherwise "collectible" unless it is in uncirculated condition. It is a clad coin made of cupronickel (like dimes and quarters), not silver. In fact all circulation half dollars dated 1971-present are made of cupronickel and are only worth face value.
The width (or diameter) of a 50p coin in the UK is 27.3 millimeters. It has a distinctive seven-sided shape, which sets it apart from many other coins. The 50p coin is made of cupronickel, giving it a shiny appearance.
The color is different. The silver is more reflective. If you cover the coin with a Kleenex you can barely see the CN coin but the silver one shows through.
From mid-1942 to 1945, (World War II) composition nickels were created. These coins are 56% copper, 35% silver and 9% manganese. There are no reports of cupronickel 1943 nickels analogous to the famous 1943 bronze cent errors. If your coin is deep gray in color it's likely to be a very oxidized silver-alloy nickel and not cupronickel. If you're not able to determine that, the coin should be inspected by an expert dealer or appraiser.
Unless it's a proof coin in its original holder, it's an ordinary circulation coin made of cupronickel (like dimes and quarters) and is worth only face value.
Circulated - $1. The coin is made of cupronickel, not silver. Uncirculated - $1.25 to $1.50
$1. Ikes were never issued in gold or gold-colored metal, only in cupronickel for circulation and silver for collector sets. Your coin was almost certainly plated for use in jewelry or something similar.
Assuming you are describing an Eisenhower dollar, a cupronickel* circulation coin would sell for face value or slightly above. A proof version of the coin would sell for 2 or 3 dollars. (*) Even though they are called "silver" dollars, circulation $1 coins made since 1971 have all been made of either cupronickel or manganese-bronze. They do not contain any precious metals.