In order to give an estimated value for this nickel, it is necessary to know more about the misspelled word. Does it actually have the letters in the wrong order or does it have letters missing. Missing letters, while not extremely common, are not unheard of. This is caused by the part of the die which makes that letter becoming filled in with grease, dirt or some other type of foreign material. This prevents it from making the letter and it appears as a missing letter on the coin. If this is what you have then, considering it is a silver nickel in great condition, its value would be $3-$5. If you do not have a missing letter then it would be necessary to know more about the coin to give any value.
Circulated 'War Nickels' run from $2.50 to $3.85 depending on mintmark and grade.
It is worth silver scrap, about $1.50-2 depending on the spot price of silver. It is 35% silver.
You have what is referred to as a Wartime nickel. It is composed of 35% silver, with the balance being copper and manganese. The silver gives it a "melt value" of about 95 cents (as of December 2009) regardless of condition. 1943S is among the more common of the wartime nickels, so your coin is probably worth about $2-$5 in nice circulated condition, and perhaps $10-$15 in Uncirculated condition.
About $2.40 for the silver content. The rising silver prices has made even about uncirculated examples just sell for melt most of the time.
Cents have never been made out of lead. 1943 wartime cents were made of steel coated with zinc. In circulated condition most sell for 25 to 50 cents.
Circulated 'War Nickels' run from $2.50 to $3.85 depending on mintmark and grade.
About $2.
A 1944-P Jefferson nickel in very fine condition (VF20) is worth: $2.00; if its mint state is MS60, the value rises to; $16.00.
It's worth at least $1.50 for its silver content (going by silver prices as of 19 June 2012) and upwards of $4 in uncirculated condition.
It is worth silver scrap, about $1.50-2 depending on the spot price of silver. It is 35% silver.
When an improvised explosive device is suspected or discovered, a 300 meter cordon is required. This is the wartime standard for these situations.
When an improvised explosive device is suspected or discovered, a 300 meter cordon is required. This is the wartime standard for these situations.
You have what is referred to as a Wartime nickel. It is composed of 35% silver, with the balance being copper and manganese. The silver gives it a "melt value" of about 95 cents (as of December 2009) regardless of condition. 1943S is among the more common of the wartime nickels, so your coin is probably worth about $2-$5 in nice circulated condition, and perhaps $10-$15 in Uncirculated condition.
You need more information, like do the coins have dates, what is the condition of the coins, where were they minted.
When an improvised explosive device is suspected or discovered, a 300-meter cordon is required. This is the wartime standard for these situations.
When an improvised explosive device is suspected or discovered, a 300 meter cordon is required. This is the wartime standard for these situations.
About $2.40 for the silver content. The rising silver prices has made even about uncirculated examples just sell for melt most of the time.