It is three times as tall, or two nickels taller.
In absolute terms, it's 3.9 mm taller: US nickels are 1.95 mm thick so two of them are 2x1.95 = 3.9 mm thick.
55 nickels is equal to $2.75. This can be calculated by multiplying the number of nickels (55) by the value of a nickel (5 cents). Therefore, 55 nickels x $0.05 = $2.75.
A nickel is 5 cents. 29,000 nickels are worth 29000*5 = 145000 cents, or $1450.
A nickel is worth 5 cents ($0.05) so 1000 nickels would be worth 1000 * 0.05 = $50
1 nickel = 5 cents. so 60,000 nickels = 60000 * 5 = 300,000 cents = 300000/100 = $3,000
A nickel is worth 5 cents, so 14,000 nickels are worth 5*14000, or 70000 cents; i.e. $700.
That depends on how many is in a stack
1 dallor
There were no nickels yet in 1840.
One mile is 1609344 mm. A US nickel is 1.95 mm thick, so a mile-high stack would contain 1609344 / 1.95 = 825,305 coins, rounded to the next-highest whole number. Each nickel is worth 5 cents so the stack's value would be 825305 * 5 = 4126525 cents, or $41,265.25
No U.S. Nickels are dated 1700. The first nickel was issued in 1866.
That depends on the number of nickels, their dates, and their condition.
All U.S nickels, save for war nickels dated 1942-45, contain 75% copper and 25% nickel. As of 14 December 2013, U.S. nickels have a melt value of 4.46 cents.
None. Except for "war nickels" minted from mid-1942 to 1945, nickels have always been made of 75% copper and 25% nickel. War nickels had a small amount of silver in them because nickel was needed for the war effort.
Silver nickels were made in 1942-1945 only.
If there were one its value would be spectacular, but all nickels except for the famous "war nickels" of WWII are made of 75% copper and 25% nickel.
55 nickels is equal to $2.75. This can be calculated by multiplying the number of nickels (55) by the value of a nickel (5 cents). Therefore, 55 nickels x $0.05 = $2.75.
A nickel weighs 5 grams. Each roll of nickels contains 40 nickels. A box contains 50 rolls (2000 nickels). 2000 X 5 = 10000 grams or 22.05 pounds.