freak dood! that's sick!
Forget aobut volumetric measuresments, that's a pain to get anywhere with, go for weight. Weigh it and divide it by the weight of 4 quarters and you totally got the value of your collection in dollars... the weight of the jug itself is neglible. Bathroom scale will you an a very rough estimate, and according to my calculations
5.670 grams per quarter, to pounds that .01, so that's 80 quarters to a pound.
Every pound your jug weighs (which I'm guessing is like 15-20 lb) is 80 quarters, that's 20 dollars, so I'm thinking you have 300-400 dollars
2006-12-29 20:42:49
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answer #1
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answered by antsam999 4
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That would depend on whether the milk jug was worth anything in and of itself, and on how many quarters were in the jug. Also, are any of the quarters "rare" or wanted by collectors or are they just plain ol' twenty-five cent pieces?
Don't you love it when someone answers a question with a question? (Or with several questions)
2006-12-29 19:41:38
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answer #2
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answered by craz4sure 1
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less than a gallon milk jug full of dimes
2006-12-29 19:09:34
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answer #3
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answered by straycat_101 3
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I had a quart size container of quarters in Las Vegas once. I won them playing slots. It was similar to a quart sized tub of margarine or cottage cheese.
When I cashed them in, it totaled about $100.
.
2006-12-29 19:16:06
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answer #4
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answered by Me 3
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take the volume of the container and divide by the volume of a quarter use cubic mm because thats the best way to measure a quarter would be a pain to calculate
2006-12-29 19:39:36
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answer #5
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answered by dheeraj 3
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At least $5,but since youre a nice guy I will give you $12 for it....
2006-12-29 19:10:10
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answer #6
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answered by J.B.1972 6
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A lot of money!
2006-12-30 13:10:06
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answer #7
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answered by Yep-itsMe 3
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