75% Copper, 25% Nickel.
75 cents can be made from 5 ten-cent coins, 3 five-cent coins, and 10 one-cent coins.
The U.S.A. 5 cent coin is 5 gram Other countries also use a 5 Cent coin though, and it was not mentioned in the question which country. Example: the Australia 5 cent coin is 2.83 gram
2 5 cent, you idiot.
A nickel is contemporary US slang for the 5 cent piece. However, it didn't always used to be that, before the 5 cent nickel coin was introduced, flying eagle and Indian head cents were made with nickel and were known as "nickels", along with the three-cent nickel.
40 cent is 1/5 of $2.00
It is made of bronze or copper-clad steel.
75 cents can be made from 5 ten-cent coins, 3 five-cent coins, and 10 one-cent coins.
No; 5 Centavo coins from Mexico were made of brass in 1960.
1856 Large Cent mintages: No exact numbers for the slanted '5', however the combined total of the 1856 cent (straight 5 and slanted 5) is 2,690,463 Source: http://coinauctionshelp.com/BraidedHair_LargeCent_Mintages_PriceGuide.html
2-cent coins were made of the same bronze alloy as 1-cent coins: 95% copper and 5% tin/zinc. Their weight was exactly twice that of a bronze cent, as well - 6.22 gm.
Gold Coins: $20-$10-$5-$3-$2.50-$1.00 Silver coins: Dollar-Half Dollar-Quarter- 20 cent piece-Dime-Half Dime-3 cent silver. Copper Coins: 5 cent- 3 cent (nickel)- 2 cent- 1 cent- Half cent
No US 5 cent coins were made in 1922
North Carolina in 1891.
So many were made that year if it's from pocket change spend it.
In Australia, the coins made primarily of zinc are the 5-cent and 10-cent coins. These coins are composed of a nickel-brass alloy that contains zinc, with the 5-cent coin being 75% copper and 25% nickel, while the 10-cent coin is 65% copper, 20% nickel, and 15% zinc. Additionally, the Australian 1-cent and 2-cent coins, which are no longer in circulation, were also primarily made of bronze, which contains zinc.
In 1960, Canadian 1 cent pieces ("pennies") were made of bronze, 5 cent pieces ("nickels") were made of nickel, and 10 cent pieces ("dimes"), 25 cent pieces ("quarters"), 50 cent pieces ("half dollars") and dollar coins were all composed of 80% silver (with, I believe, the balance being copper).
The first 5-cent US nickel was made in 1866, the 3-cent nickel in 1865, and the copper-nickel flying eagle 1-cent in 1856.