yes
It would depend on the size of the telephone box, but probably not.
If you had 1 million pounds in 1 pence coins, you would have a total of 100 million 1 pence coins. This is because there are 100 pence in 1 pound, so 1 million pounds would be equivalent to 100 million pence. Each pence coin represents 1 pence, so the total number of coins would be 100 million.
One pound coin weighs approximately 9.5 grams. Therefore, 1 million pound coins weigh about 9.5 million grams, which is equivalent to 9.5 tonnes.
Assuming that 1 pound is 4cm 3 then 1 million would be 4 million cm 3. Pound coin is 3.15 mm thick so a tower of 1 million, would be 3150 metres tall.
1 = 9.5 gm (UK 1 Pound coin) 1,000 = 9.5 kg 1,000,000 = 9,500 kg
5 Million One Pound coins placed edge to edge would stretch for 112.5 kilometres. Travelling via the M1, that would put you somewhere in the vicinity of Nottingham.
The Royal Mint produced 89.886 million 1996 One Pound coins, many of which are still in circulation.
1 kilogram of pound coins is equivalent to approximately 109 coins, so 3 kilograms would be around 327 coins. As of 2021, one British pound coin is worth 1 GBP. Thus, 3 kilos of pound coins would be worth approximately 327 GBP.
The weight of a £1 coin is 9.5 grams. Therefore 5,000 would weigh 47,500 grams. This equates to: 47.5 kilo 105 lb Curiously, at todays' market values, this weight in gold (105lb) would be worth $1,464,320. 5000lb of gold (which, lest we forget, is what the currency used to be based upon) would be worth over $70million
A pound of gold is worth more than half a pound of gold.
Oh, dude, let me break it down for you. So, technically, a pile of 1 million pound coins would be taller than the Eiffel Tower if you stacked them one on top of the other. But, like, if you spread them out flat on the ground, they wouldn't reach the height of the Eiffel Tower. So, it's all about how you stack those coins, man.
The number of coins that equal 1 pound depends on the denomination of the coins used. For instance, it would take 100 one-penny coins to make 1 pound, or 50 two-penny coins. If using 5-pence coins, you would need 20 of them. Therefore, the total can vary based on the coin denomination.