Starting in 1965, US dimes and quarters have been made of a "sandwich" consisting of a pure copper core with outer layers of 75% copper / 25% nickel alloy.
Half-dollars dated 1965 to 1969 are made of a silver/copper sandwich giving them an overall 40% silver content. But starting in 1971, halves have been made of the same material as dimes and quarters.
Dollar coins from 1971 to 1999 were also made of copper-nickel. Since 2000 they've been made of manganese brass.
Note that nickels are also made of copper-nickel. The only nickels that ever had any silver in them were minted from 1942 to 1945.
All U.S. dimes and quarters dated before 1965 are 90% silver. The only nickels to ever contain silver are dated 1942-1945. These coins are easily identified by the large mint mark (P, D, or S) over Monticello's dome.
It depends on their dates and denominations.All cents were made of bronze, an alloy of 95% copper with tin and/or zinc.Up till 1964 dimes, quarters, and half dollars were made of 90% silver and 10% copper.Starting in 1965, dimes and quarters were made of copper-nickel, with no silver. Half dollars were made of 40% silver and 60% copper.In 1971 half dollars were changed to the same copper-nickel composition as dimes and quarters.
All US dimes made before 1965 are silver and are worth at least $1.25.
Half dollars, quarters, dimes, nickels and pennies were struck in 1949.
They're many facts about US quarters but ine is that all quarters made before 1965 contain 90% silver.
All pre-1965 US quarters and dimes are 90% silver.
All U.S. dimes and quarters dated before 1965 are 90% silver. The only nickels to ever contain silver are dated 1942-1945. These coins are easily identified by the large mint mark (P, D, or S) over Monticello's dome.
US dimes and quarters (along with half dollars and dollar coins) dated 1964 and earlier are made out of 90% silver and 10% copper.
1964 and before, dimes were made out of 90 percent silver. The same went for quarters and half dollars. And then the us mint made half dollars from 1965-1969 40 percent silver.
The first US sandwich coins were the 1965 dimes & quarters.
Since 1965, US quarters have been made of 91.67% copper and 8.33% nickel. Dimes and half dollars also have the same composition.
1964 for dimes and quarters, and half dollars with 90% silver. Halves from 1965-70 were still 40% silver.
It depends on their dates and denominations.All cents were made of bronze, an alloy of 95% copper with tin and/or zinc.Up till 1964 dimes, quarters, and half dollars were made of 90% silver and 10% copper.Starting in 1965, dimes and quarters were made of copper-nickel, with no silver. Half dollars were made of 40% silver and 60% copper.In 1971 half dollars were changed to the same copper-nickel composition as dimes and quarters.
All US dimes made before 1965 are silver and are worth at least $1.25.
It depends on when it was minted. Modern dimes don't contain any silver, but up till 1964 all US dimes were made of an alloy of 90% silver and 10% copper. When the price of silver shot up in the 1960s the Mint was forced to remove silver from circulating coins, so all circulating dimes and quarters dated 1965 and later, and halves and dollars dated 1971 and later, have no silver in them.
US quarters were not made of silver in 1965, but rather of copper-nickel. The last silver quarter made for circulation in the US were produced in 1964.
There is no silver in currently minted US dimes. Silver was replaced by copper-nickel starting with the 1965-dated coins.Special "Prestige" proof sets containing silver dimes, quarters, and halves have been made for collectors since 1992 but these coins aren't intended for circulation.