No, not all nickels weigh the same. While the standard weight of a U.S. nickel is 5 grams, variations in the minting process over time can result in slight weight differences among individual coins.
All US Nickels weigh the same, 5 grams.
$2 in nickels is 40 coins. All US nickels weigh 5 grams Thus $2 in nickels would weigh 40*5 = 200 gm
Assuming "100" means "$100", there are 20 nickels in a dollar so $100 is 2000 nickels. US nickels weigh 5 gm so 2000 of them weigh 5*2000 = 10,000 gm, or 10 kg. Current Canadian nickels weigh 3.95 gm so 2000 of them weigh 3.95*2000 = 7900 gm, or 7.9 kg.
From 1866 to date all US nickels weigh the same, 5 grams.
All U.S. nickels weigh 5 grams as issued.
Yes. All US nickels have a nominal weight of 5 grams.
They weigh the same.
All US Nickels weigh the same, 5 grams.
$2 in nickels is 40 coins. All US nickels weigh 5 grams Thus $2 in nickels would weigh 40*5 = 200 gm
Assuming "100" means "$100", there are 20 nickels in a dollar so $100 is 2000 nickels. US nickels weigh 5 gm so 2000 of them weigh 5*2000 = 10,000 gm, or 10 kg. Current Canadian nickels weigh 3.95 gm so 2000 of them weigh 3.95*2000 = 7900 gm, or 7.9 kg.
They weigh the same!
All US nickels are the same Diameter 21.2mm and weigh 5 grams, so if its bigger than that, it's not genuine.
20 kg is 20,000 grams. A US nickel weighs 5 gm so it would take 20000/5 = 4000 US nickels to weigh 20 kg. Current Canadian nickels weigh 3.95 gm so you'd need 20000/3.95 = 5064 Canadian nickels to weigh the same amount, rounded to the next whole number of coins.
All U.S. nickels weigh 5 grams.
From 1866 to date all US nickels weigh the same, 5 grams.
If you think about it for a few seconds, a kilo is the weight of a liter of water (i.e. half a standard soda bottle) so 6 kg is definitely not the answer. But while 6 grams is a lot closer it's still not on the mark. A US nickel weighs exactly 5 gm, while current Canadian nickels weigh 3.95 gm.
None of them do. You have to collect 40 of them all in one place to get 200 grams of nickels.