The coins are still found in circulation and only face value.
The melt value for a 1964 nickel is the same as any other date of nickels (except 1942-45), because unlike the dime and quarter, nickels weren't silver, and there was no change to it in 1965. As of 19 August 2013, U.S. nickels have a melt value of 4.6 cents.
Only the "War Nickels" of 1942 to 1945 were made with a silver content of 35%
If such a coin existed it would be spectacularly valuable, but all 1964 nickels - in fact, all US nickels made since 1938 - carry a picture of Thomas Jefferson. Abraham Lincoln has been on the cent since 1909.In any case 1964-dated nickels are very common. Any found in pocket change are generally only worth face value.
5 cents. The only nickels to contain silver are the "war nickels" produced from 1943-1945 with a large mintmark over the Monticello. 1964 nickels use the same composition as today, have a high mintage and are easily found in pocket change. They are worth no more than 5 cents. There were over 2 billion nickels minted that year.
It depends on the grades of the coins in the set, most sets that I see are in the grade range of Very Fine or below and are of low value, $20.00 to $25.00. Complete sets of Jefferson nickels are common.
The melt value for a 1964 nickel is the same as any other date of nickels (except 1942-45), because unlike the dime and quarter, nickels weren't silver, and there was no change to it in 1965. As of 19 August 2013, U.S. nickels have a melt value of 4.6 cents.
Same as post-1964 nickels: NONE. The only exception is for nickels minted 1942-45.
To find the value of 435 nickels, multiply the number of nickels by the value of each nickel, which is 5 cents. Therefore, 435 nickels is equal to 435 x 0.05 = $21.75.
100,000,000 nickels is equivalent to $5,000,000. This is calculated by multiplying the number of nickels by their value: 100,000,000 nickels × $0.05 (value of one nickel) equals $5,000,000.
Only the "War Nickels" of 1942 to 1945 were made with a silver content of 35%
If such a coin existed it would be spectacularly valuable, but all 1964 nickels - in fact, all US nickels made since 1938 - carry a picture of Thomas Jefferson. Abraham Lincoln has been on the cent since 1909.In any case 1964-dated nickels are very common. Any found in pocket change are generally only worth face value.
Face value.
Most of them are still worth face value. Unlike dimes and quarters, nickels didn't change metal content in 1964, so older specimens still commonly turn up in circulation.
5 cents. The only nickels to contain silver are the "war nickels" produced from 1943-1945 with a large mintmark over the Monticello. 1964 nickels use the same composition as today, have a high mintage and are easily found in pocket change. They are worth no more than 5 cents. There were over 2 billion nickels minted that year.
Ten thousand million nickels is 10,000,000,000 nickels (10 billion) with a value of $500,000,000.00 or 500 million dollars.
It depends on the grades of the coins in the set, most sets that I see are in the grade range of Very Fine or below and are of low value, $20.00 to $25.00. Complete sets of Jefferson nickels are common.
1964 US nickels were minted at Philadelphia (no mint mark at that time) and Denver ("D")