There were 3 or 4 years during WW2 where nickel became a valuable commodity for the war effort. During these years I think they were somewhere around 35 % silver and the rest copper. The odds of finding one in circulation today would be like winning the lotto. But in the 60s you could still find them once in awhile. I think most would have been melted when they were taken out of circulation making thier value as much based on rarity for collectors rather than its silver content.
Heh, we're certainly into the minutia here which is fine/fun - I'd have to do the math with weights but I'd expect a 90% silver dime to have roughly equal or less the silver content of a 35% silver nickel (removing the rarity/value as actual collectible part).
1oz Silver coins will be more useful for barter as they don't need to be assayed.
You are correct,I also have that covered.
Junk silver and gram weight gold too.
Yep, dimes are about 2 bucks now and I don't think you can get smaller increments than that?
There were 3 or 4 years during WW2 where nickel became a valuable commodity for the war effort. During these years I think they were somewhere around 35 % silver and the rest copper. The odds of finding one in circulation today would be like winning the lotto. But in the 60s you could still find them once in awhile. I think most would have been melted when they were taken out of circulation making thier value as much based on rarity for collectors rather than its silver content.
Heh, we're certainly into the minutia here which is fine/fun - I'd have to do the math with weights but I'd expect a 90% silver dime to have roughly equal or less the silver content of a 35% silver nickel (removing the rarity/value as actual collectible part).