How are coins made? anyone know. please answer quick.


anyone know.
please answer quick.
by a coin making device
With iron.
A mould, a reverse of the coin frontage, stamps them out
individually hand carved.
A Die, Cast, Pressure, and Heat, then tumbled and polished.


If you break a Note of lb 5 , you can get masses coins....don"t have to stir to the roots............
xXx-----LOL------xXx

Answer:
Step 1: Blanking
The U.S. Mint buys strips of metal something like 13 inches wide and 1,500 foot long to manufacture the nickel, dime, quarter, half-dollar, and dollar. The strips come rolled surrounded by a coil. Each coil is fed through a blanking press which punches out round discs call blanks. The leftover strip, call webbing is chopped and recycled. (To manufacture the cent, the Mint buys blanks in place made for stamping after supplying fabricators with copper and zinc.)

Step 2: Annealing, Washing and Drying
The blanks are heated within an annealing furnace to soften them. Then, they are run through a washer and dryer.

Step 3: Upsetting
Next, the polite blanks go through an upsetting mill. This raise a rim around their edges.

Step 4: Striking
Finally, the blanks go to the coining press. Here, they are stamped near the designs and inscriptions which make them open United States coins.

Step 5: Inspecting
Press operators using magnify glasses spot-check respectively batch of not long struck coins.

Step 6: Counting and Bagging
An automatic counting machine counts the coins and drops them into huge bags. The heaps are sealed shut, loaded onto pallets, and taken by forklifts to the vault for storage. New coins are shipped by truck to Federal Reserve Banks. From there, the coins move about to your local bank!
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