"Ballistic roll" is a marketing term used by some private companies that sell sealed rolls of uncirculated US coins. The rolls are usually accompanied by elaborate display cases. The problem with many of these offers is that they're hyped as instant collectibles and are sold for far more than the coins and cases are actually worth. The companies count on buyers not doing any research before they hand over their credit card number. A running joke in the numismatic community is that the only "ballistic" aspect of these coins is how angry purchasers are when they find out how much they've been overcharged.
There are $50 in a roll of toonies which is 25 coins.
The term "ballistic roll" is a meaningless phrase invented by a private company that took ordinary Presidential dollar coins, packaged them in plastic, and sold them at inflated prices by means of hyped advertising. Presidential dollars are brass, not gold, so they're NOT precious metal coins or anything special. The only positive note is that the coins are uncirculated so they might bring about $1.25 to $1.50 on the open market. But that's far less than their cost from the company that packaged them.
40 Quaters are in a roll of quarters
It depends on what type of coins you have. There are 50 pennies in a roll, 40 nickles, 50 dimes, and 40 quarters.
10
40
There are fifty coins in a roll of US one cent coins, casually called pennies.
Sounds like something from the World Monetary Reserve, a private outfit that packs ordinary circulation coins in special holders they call "ballistic rolls" and sells them at significant markups. However most of what I've heard tells me that "ballistic" actually describes how people go when they find out that they've paid 3 or 4 times as much for these coins as compared to just getting them from a local bank.
25 loonies come in a roll.
There are 25 $1.00 Canadian Loonie Coins in a roll.
40 nickels are in a roll of $ 2