it has not yet been made public as the mint has not agreed upon a cost effective alloy to replace nickel. their current choice is a synthetic plasticizer that contains petroleum derivatives, which is counter intuitive for a nation trying to appear as if they are trying liberate themselves from black gold. below is the comp. data for current and past nickel alloys used by the us mint. Cupro-Nickel Cu-Ni-Sn Nickel Silver [edit for copyright and patents] Alloy ASTM Spec MSDS 706 B122 715 B122 725 B122 752 B122 762 B122 770 B122 CHEMISTRY Copper Cu 88.6 69.5 88.2 65 59 55 Oxygen O Zinc Zn 17 29 27 Tin Sn 2.3 Nickel Ni 10 30 9.5 18 12 18 Iron Fe 1.4 0.5 Phosphorus P Aluminum Al PHYSICAL PROPERTIES Trade Name Copper Nickel 10% Copper Nickel 30% Copper Nickel Tin Nickel Silver 65-18 Nickel Silver 59-12 Nickel Silver 55-18 Density (lb/cu. in. @ 68 d. F) .323 .323 .321 .316 .310 .314 Modulus of Elasticity (x 1000 ksi (106 psi)) 18 22 20 18 18 18 Electrical Conductivity (% I.A.C.S. @ 68 d. F (Annealed)) 9 4.6 11 6 9 5.5 Thermal Conductivity (Btu/sq.ft./ft/hr./ d. F @ 68 d. F) 26 17 31 19 24 17 Coef. of Thermal Expansion (x 106 in./in./ d. F (68 d. to 572 d. F) 9.5 9.0 9.2 9.0 9.0 9.3 TENSILE STRENGTH x Ksi (Kgf/mm2 = KSI x .7031) Annealed (S0XX) 43-50 52 Min. 45-65 53-63 57-75 61-76 1/4 Hard (H01) 51-67 58-72 55-75 58-72 65-81 69-87 1/2 Hard (H02) 58-72 66-80 65-80 66-80 75-91 78-95 3/4 Hard (H03) - - - 74-86 83-98 88-101 HARD (H04) 71-83 75-88 75-90 78-91 90-105 92-109 Extra Hard (H06) 73-85 80-92 80-95 86-98 99-114 102-117 Spring (H08) 78-88 84-94 85-100 90-101 107-122 108-123 Extra Spring (H10) - - 90-105 96 Min. 114 Min. 116 Min. YIELD STRENGTH x Ksi (Nominal 0.2% offset) (Kgf/mm2 = KSI x .7031) Annealed (S0XX) 19 28 21 25 36 32 1/4 Hard (H01) 53 47 73 Max 45 52 63 1/2 Hard (H02) 63 68 68 63 70 78 3/4 Hard (H03) - - - 75 82 92 HARD (H04) 75 78 80 82 89 98 Extra Hard (H06) 76 83 85 91 98 107 Spring (H08) 76 Min. 86 90 93 105 112 Extra Spring (H10) - - 95 95 Min. 102 Min. 115 Min. ELONGATION (% in 2 inches) Annealed (S0XX) 35 30 Min. 35 35 40 43 1/4 Hard (H01) 12 17 5 24 35 26 1/2 Hard (H02) 5 6 10 14 18 14 3/4 Hard (H03) - - - 8 10 8 HARD (H04) 1 Min. 3 3 5 4 4 Extra Hard (H06) 1 Min. 2 2 3 2 1 Min. Spring (H08) 1 Max 1 Min. 1 Min. 2 1 Max. 1 Max. Extra Spring (H10) - - 1 Max. 1 1 Max. 1 Max. HARDNESS Rockwell values, scale as noted, (* = HRF = HR30T) .020 inches thick and over Annealed (S0XX) 75* 83* 50 Max. 85* 90* 87 1/4 Hard (H01) 64 74 85 Max. 62 73 75 1/2 Hard (H02) 73 80 80 75 84 86 3/4 Hard (H03) - - - 81 88 90 HARD (H04) 81 86 82 85 92 93 Extra Hard (H06) 84 88 87 90 96 97 Spring (H08) 87 89 90 92 98 98 Extra Spring (H10) - - 91 92 Min. 98 Min. 98 Min.
HR 3330 http://www.numismaster.com/ta/numis/Article.jsp?ad=article&ArticleId=2671 Still pending. Only proposed You know Congress, they cant get a single thing done!
Maybe they will make them out of the same composition as the new Pres dollars. Only this time they will include the chocolate!
my wish i hope our new cent and nickel will be like that of canadian. it can maintain its size and color. and a little reduction on its weight.
And nickel plate them like they do the cent planchets today so the average Joe in the street will never have a clue that they change was made. (There are still people out there that think the coppernickel coins have silver in the outer layers, an a lot of people never realized that the cent was changed to zinc because it still looks like copper. Two hundred years ago the population was so in tune with the value of the metal in the coins that they exported silver dollars because of a .5% premium of metal over face, and today they blithely spend coins with a metal content nearly100% over face
welcome to electronic banking and the marketing of Visa. coins are worthless and cash slows everyone down. -Steve
I'm picturing a bleak future of really lightweight coins with outer materials which oxidize immediately. eew. The real "problem" is the crashing value of the dollar. If the dollar was back to where it was 5 years or so ago this discussion wouldn't even be taking place.
color nickel and cent why not colorized the aluminum based nickel and cent?. just paint cu-nickel color on an aluminum nickel size coin. also paint copper color for aluminum cent.
That's a huge and important change in mindset. You hear people say things to the effect that we "can't afford" to make coins from silver or copper without stopping to think that maybe it was the weight of the silver and copper that gave the coin its face value in the first place. I'm sometimes amazed how people actually think that it is somehow necessary for coins to have an intrinsic value less than the face value. I guess someday it will all be electronic anyway.
I guess they think that way because throughout recorded history, every single time a coin was made that its face value equaled its intrinsic value - the public very soon removed them all from circulation and hoarded them. It's not the goverments that create this issue - it's the people - Gresham's Law - bad money drives out good. So since your idea of having intrinsic value equaling face value hasn't worked, not even once in the last 3,000 years or so - people pretty much believe it's not going to.