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6 answers

I believe those were actually steel pennies made from this alloy due to rationing during the 2nd world war. Very rare anymore.

2007-07-13 10:15:59 · answer #1 · answered by 1235 4 · 1 0

If you are taking about a U.S. cent the 1946 is not worth more than the 1920. The 1920 is valued at .10 to $5.25 in circulated grades the 1946 is .02 to .05. If you mean the British Penny, even though the 1920 had a larger mintage than the 1946 the 1920 is still worth more money. Even the Canadian 1920 cent is worth more than the 1946. You got some bad info maybe?

2007-07-13 20:27:18 · answer #2 · answered by Taiping 7 · 0 0

The amount of any coin minted would add value to a collector. Simple supply and demand rules apply. The less availible the more value. The condition of the coin would also be a factor to determine the value weather cirrculated or not. Uncirrculated would have the most value. Errors in minting can make coins worth more also to collectors. They are still face value to the government and banks!

2007-07-13 17:20:57 · answer #3 · answered by dealmeout2003 2 · 1 0

Because thats when world war 2 was and i think they have wheat on the back

2007-07-13 17:55:07 · answer #4 · answered by Thomas28 1 · 0 0

Ya what Taiping said your just a Noob.

You going to cry, THERE NO CRYING IN BASEBALL!

ha ha ha

2007-07-14 03:53:55 · answer #5 · answered by psycho 2 · 0 0

Might be the amount that they put in circulation.

2007-07-13 17:15:37 · answer #6 · answered by indiansbearsandangels 3 · 1 0

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