You need to start with the following information:
That means 1 US ounce of:
A nickel is worth 5 cents so there are 20 ( = 100/5 ) nickels in one dollar. Thus there are 20 million nickels in $1 million.
8 dimes, 1 nickel 7 dimes, 3 nickels 6 dimes, 5 nickels 5 dimes, 7 nickels 4 dimes, 9 nickels 3 dimes, 11 nickels 2 dimes, 13 nickels 1 dime, 15 nickels 17 nickels
20 nickels in 1 dollar. So 100 x 20 = 2000 nickels
$1 = 20 nickels $527 = 10 540 nickels
There are 20 nickels in $1 so $1000 is 20*1000 = 20,000 nickels
six
According to the US Mint website, a nickel weighs 5 grams, which is 0.1764 ounces. Divide 1/0.1764 = 5.67 nickels per ounce. So in one ounce, you can have 5 nickels.
A US 5¢ coin weighs 5g. One ounce is 28.35 grams, so you can get 5 nickels in an ounce, with 3.35g to spare.
5 nickels 1 penny
One Jefferson nickel weighs 5 grams, and one ounce is 28.35 grams. As such, it would take six nickels to reach one ounce.
That's going to depend on the form in which you hold them. 1 ounce of pennies, nickels, dimes, quarters, dollar coins, dollar bills, checques, or gold, all have different values in cents.
With silver at $27.10 per ounce. War nickels are worth about $1.50.
One silver war nickel weighs 5 grams and contains 35% silver, or 1.75 grams of silver per nickel. One troy ounce is 31.1 grams. It would take 18 war nickels to make one ounce of silver.
"War nickels" were made from late 1942 to 1945. Each one contains 1.75 gm of silver, alloyed with copper and manganese. One troy ounce is about 31.1 gm, so you'd need 31.1 / 1.75 or about 18 war nickels to contain a troy ounce of silver.War nickels can be identified by a large mint mark letter over the dome of Monticello on the back. Regardless of popular misunderstanding, they are the only US nickels that contain any silver.
i think its 1!
There are approximately 223 nickels in 1 kilogram.
20 nickels