.07234 oz of pure silver.
US silver dimes, since 1873, contain .07234 oz of pure silver. However, except for certain collector coins, there is no silver in dimes minted from 1965 to the present .
A roll of dimes typically contains 50 coins, with each dime weighing approximately 2.268 grams. Therefore, a roll of dimes would weigh around 113.4 grams (50 dimes x 2.268 grams/dime).
A new dime weighs 2.268 g. There are 50 dimes in a $5 roll A $5 roll weighs 113.4 g.
Presuming that you are referring to US dimes issued between 1875 and 1964 (dimes older than 1875 had different weights and/or fineness), dimes weigh 2.50 grams and are 90% silver (the remaining 10% is copper). This means that the ASW (Actual Silver Weight) is 0.07234 troy ounces. Thus, it would require 14 dimes (this number is rounded up; the precise number is 13.8236 dimes) to have one troy ounce of silver.
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16fl oz is = to 1 pint
A man who filled a 20 oz soda jar with dimes said there were 1301 dimes in it. http://www.flickr.com/photos/targeteer2k/539627783/ A gallon is 128 oz, so (128/20)*1301 = 8326
16fl oz for 2 cup water
Yes fl oz means "fluid ounce"as opposed to dry ounce. such as 16 oz of something dry like flour.
16 fl oz = 2 cups.8 fl oz = 1 cup.
16 fluid ounces is equal to 1 pint
.07234 oz of pure silver.
an ounce 8 nics 4 dimes 2 halves 1 oz
32 fl.oz. equals 1 quart. 16 is only half
1 quart = 2 pints Imperial: 1pt = 20fl oz 1 qt = 2 x 20fl oz = 40fl oz US: 1pt = 16fl oz 1 qt = 2 x 16fl oz = 32fl oz (The Imperial and US fluid ounce is the same)