1943 cents were minted from zinc coated steel, not aluminum. If they were aluminum they'd be so light they could blow away from your hand in a slight breeze.
For prices, see the following link
it is not rare enough to have any value [will have value in about 3 years]
A 1943 steel penny with no mintmark can be worth $.35 - $1.50
The face value is 1 cent.
$10,000
50 dollars
it is not rare enough to have any value [will have value in about 3 years]
A 1943 steel penny with no mintmark can be worth $.35 - $1.50
A 1943 steel penny is worth just that 1cent.
The face value is 1 cent.
It sounds like you're referring to the 1943 wheat penny, which is actually made of zinc-coated steel, not silver or aluminum. In circulated condition, one is worth about 10 cents.
There's no such thing.
50 dollars
$10,000
It's made of zinc-plated steel, not aluminum. In average condition a so-called "war penny" is worth 10 cents to a half-dollar
Average value is 5 to 25 cents.
It's zinc-coated steel, not aluminum or silver(*). Copper was needed to make ammunition so in 1943 the mint made pennies out of scrap steel instead of bronze. About a billion were struck and a lot of them were saved so they don't have much extra value. In average condition they're worth about a quarter, plus or minus. (*) If you consider it for a minute, a silver penny would have been worth more than a dime and an aluminum penny would be so light it would blow away in a slight breeze, so it couldn't be either of those metals.
$35,000.00 to $81,000.00