4 quarters = 1 Lb.
Modern US quarters weigh 5.67 gm each, or 1/5 of a US ounce. There are 16 ounces in a US pound which is 80 quarters, or $20.
A quarter weighs 0.2 ounces, so it takes 5 of them to make one ounce. A pound has 16 ounces so it takes 5 x 16 = 80 quarters to make a pound. And you have 121 pounds of quarters, so that makes 121 x 80 = 9,680 quarters. But a quarter is one-fourth of a dollar, so these 9,680 quarters have a total value of $2,420.00.
Current US quarters weigh 5.67 gm, which is 0.2 US ounces. That means five quarters weigh one US ounce; a pound is 16 ounces so it's the same weight as 16 X 5 = 80 quarters.
That sounds like an excellent math experiment - see how many quarters it takes to fill one inch of the can - then multiply out how many inches tall the can is so you can know about how many quarters it will take to fill the whole can!
A pound IS a unit of weight, so one pound of quarters weighs ...... one pound.
96
One quarter weighs 5.67 grams, and there are 453.59 grams in one pound. That makes 80 quarters to a pound, which is worth $20.
According to the official weights of U.S. contemporary coins, a quarter weighs 5.67 grams. One pound = 453.59 gms; therefore there are approximately 80 quarters per pound. 18 pounds of quarters times 80 quarters per pound = 1440 quarters at value of .25 cents each is (drum roll please!) . . .$360.00Note: This is only an estimate. A more reliable way would be to measure one pound of quarters on a very reliable scale, count the value of one pound, and then multiply by 18.
2 quarters make up one half
A quarter weighs 0.2 ounces, so it takes 5 of them to make one ounce. A pound has 16 ounces so it takes 5 x 16 = 80 quarters to make a pound. And you have 121 pounds of quarters, so that makes 121 x 80 = 9,680 quarters. But a quarter is one-fourth of a dollar, so these 9,680 quarters have a total value of $2,420.00.
it takkes one can to make a pound
just took one to the bank,plastic with hand hold. It held $428.75 which is 1715 quarters
Four.
No.No.No.No.
That sounds like an excellent math experiment - see how many quarters it takes to fill one inch of the can - then multiply out how many inches tall the can is so you can know about how many quarters it will take to fill the whole can!
One and a third of them.