160 quarters 4 quarters = 1 dollar 160 quarters = 40 dollars
There are 4 quarters to a dollar.Therefore: 80 x 4 = 320 quarters.
Four million quarters
Well, honey, if my math is still sharp as a tack, it would take 400 quarters to make a hundred bucks. So, start scrounging up those quarters and maybe you'll be rolling in the dough in no time. But hey, who needs quarters when you've got all this attitude, am I right?
Forty of them.
2,000
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!
Read you owners manual.. that's what its there for.
it would take 82
160 quarters 4 quarters = 1 dollar 160 quarters = 40 dollars
There are 4 quarters to a dollar.Therefore: 80 x 4 = 320 quarters.
It would take approximately 72 silver quarters to weigh one pound.
Four million quarters
It takes 8,000 quarters. (That's $2,000.00)
The radius of a U.S. quarter is about 0.478 inches. The thickness of a U.S. quarter is about 0.069 inches. Being cylindrical, the volume of the quarter will be πr2h: v = πr2h ∴ v ≈ 3.142 × (0.478")2 × 0.069" ∴ v ≈ 0.488 cubic inches. All you need to do then is divide volume of the cylinder by the volume of the quarter: 169.56 / 0.488 ≈ 345.41 So it would take about 346 US quarters to fill such a cylinder.
The volume of a quarter coin is 808.53 mm cubed (assuming it's not worn thin). In theory you could fit 1000 000 /808.53 = 1236.81 quarters in a litre. However, that assumes you can fill all the space and you can't do that because of the fixed cylindrical shape of the quarters. You would have to look at how many coins would fit in your particular shape.
Since 1000 US gallons = 4000 US quart, then answer is 4000 quarts.