silver nickels

Also, older Canadian five-cent pieces are made of pure nickel, or at least, a much higher concentration than the American alloy. I’m not sure when Canada changed their alloy, but it was sometime between 1978 and 1989 (I have two Canadian nickels here in front of me bearing those dates). It’s very easy to tell the difference: An old Canadian nickel will stick to a magnet, as nickel, like iron, is ferromagnetic.

By the way, aluminum powder may well be silvery, but the much more common aluminum oxide powder is black. Try handling a bunch of aluminum all day some day… Your hands will be completely blackened.

Chronos Canadian “nickels” have possibly undergone the most changes of composition of any nation. They were pure nickel from 1922-42. They made a brass one 1942-43. They were chrome-plated steel 1944-45. Back to nickel 1946-50. 1951-54 basically chrome-plated steel again. Back to nickel from 1955-1981. Then copper-nickel from 1982-current.

Sheesh! Can’t they make up their minds?

*For other readers- I know this post was boring. If you’ve gotten this far in the thread, you must be boring also.

I’m not sure about your dates. I’ve got a 1964 Canadian nickel that’s magnetic. Also, I don’t think Canada ever used pure nickel; such a coin would literally be too brittle to circulate.

Chance Nickel is magnetic(at room temperature).
It is not too brittle to be used as a coin.

The American nickel, as has already been stated, is only 25% nickel, but even pure nickel isn’t magnetic, and copper certainly isn’t, either. At room temperature, ground into filings or even molten, nickel isn’t magnetic.

chance
I have in my hand a 1924 Canadian nickel. It is made out of pure nickel, contrary to what you might believe. I just took a magnet off of my refrigerator. It picks up the nickel. What else can I tell you? Pure nickel IS magnetic. If you think it isn’t, give me a cite!

You are correct in saying that US nickels are 75% copper. A magnet does not pick up an American nickel.

Not that it helps Chance any…
http://www.tamuk.edu/chemistry/WebElements/nickel_element.htm
http://www.fordhamprep.pvt.k12.ny.us/gcurran/3rdquart/nielem.htm

samclem—I stand corrected. I thought nickel wasn’t magnetic. I even looked it up in my reference materials, but I see that I didn’t look deep enough. Looking again, I see that it is indeed ferromagnetic. Thanks for your kind, non-condescending reply and your patience with me, whose knowledge of chemistry isn’t… well… isn’t flawless. I would have researched your assertion further, but apparently the work has been done for me.

That sounds horrible - that they are worth so little that they are just melted down for their silver. Akin to melting down some of our history, I guess. Oh well, supply and demand…

We sell random “war nickels” in our pawn shop for about 40 cents each. We generally pay about half that. Uncirculated ones go for a couple of bucks. As far as easy to find, I dunno. I’ve dug through many a roll of nickels in my off time and found maybe two. About as easy to find as Indian Head cents in a roll of pennies, it seems to me.

Like iron and nickel, cobalt is ferromagnetic. (In Building Blocks of the Universe, Isaac Asimov said gadolinium–a “rare earth metal”–is weakly magnetic. My Dad [who had no background in chemistry] disagreed with that. :rolleyes: )

I’m glad you chimed in my friend

I have an Indian Head nickel thats pretty worn and dated for the year 1935. Assuming that its real, How much money is it worth today (if anything above face value)?

The Teeming Millions probably already know that the five-cent nickel coin was introduced in 1883, even if coins containing nickel were minted before. In fact this coin caused the mint some embarrassment: The original “Liberty Head” nickel had the Roman numeral “V” on the back, but not the word “Cents.” So one entrepreneur gold-plated these “Racketeer Nickels” and passed them off as five-dollar gold pieces! He was arrested, I understand, but it turned out they couldn’t charge him with violating any law. The next year the design was changed. :smiley:

See my post above. The first five-cent nickle coin was introduced in 1866. It was made out of 75% copper and 25% nickel, just as were the 1883 “V” nickels.

So If this Indian head nickel that I have is legit, is it worth anything more than 5 cents?

Based on the online guides I’ve found, roughly 30 cents if it is in fairly good condition. It’s probably legit, no point in faking something that isn’t worth much.

The silver nickels minted during World War II were intended to free up nickel for use in Oak Ridge’s uranium gaseous diffusion enrichment facility. Natural uranium was converted to uranium hexafluoride, a gas, and piped through the gaseous diffusion plant. Uranium hexafluoride (UF6) is extremely corrosive and huge quantities of nickel were required to protect the equipment from corrosion. The highly-enriched uranium (U235) was used to build the “Little Boy” atomic bomb that was dropped on Hiroshima, Japan.

samclem: How you doin’? Any deals for a fellow collector? :smiley:

:o
I believe I remember, vaguely, reading about a 5-cent nickel coin that predates the Liberty Head nickel and matches the description you’ve given. I’ll verify with a coin book (I’m in a library right now).
I don’t know offhand when the silver “half-disme” was discontinued.

Silver “half dimes” were produced through 1873, and co-existed with the new(1866) “nickel” five cent coins.