A £50 note weighs around 1 gram, so £200,000 in £50 notes would weigh approximately 4 kilograms.
A pound note typically weighs about 1 gram, so 200,000 pound notes would weigh about 200 kilograms. A 50 pound note weighs roughly 1 gram, so 50 notes would weigh about 50 grams.
250000 pounds in 20 pound notes would weigh 12500 pounds, as you would have 12500 notes.
If 1 million pounds was in 20 pound notes, it would weigh 50,000 pounds. This calculation is based on the fact that there are 50,000 individual 20 pound notes in a total sum of 1 million pounds.
They both weigh the same, one pound each. The weight is determined by the measurement in pounds, not the material.
The weigh the same. A pound is a pound is a pound no matter what the object is.
A pound note typically weighs about 1 gram, so 200,000 pound notes would weigh about 200 kilograms. A 50 pound note weighs roughly 1 gram, so 50 notes would weigh about 50 grams.
No, pound notes are no longer legal tender in Scotland. They have been gradually replaced by pound coins and polymer banknotes. If you have any old pound notes, you can exchange them at a bank or post office.
None. Pound notes are no longer used. We use pound coins now.
A pound !
no
There were 1 million George Best Five Pound notes printed.
250000 pounds in 20 pound notes would weigh 12500 pounds, as you would have 12500 notes.
Yes.
The Bank of England currently issues Five Pound, Ten Pound, Twenty Pound and Fifty Pound notes for Britain, plus a variety of banknotes for a number of other countries.
1,500 Ten Pound notes would add up to 15,000 Pounds.
A pound is a measurment of weight. The weight of a pound does not change. Therefore, a pound of "fjhfjhdfh" would be equivalent to a pound of "abc" or "xyz", they would all be as heavy as a pound.
If 1 million pounds was in 20 pound notes, it would weigh 50,000 pounds. This calculation is based on the fact that there are 50,000 individual 20 pound notes in a total sum of 1 million pounds.