In Phil Kane writes:
On Wed, 28 Dec 2011 10:20:50 +0900, Miles Bader wrote:
Japanese yen coins are made of aluminum, which is about 1/3 the cost
of copper per unit weight, and 1/4 the weight per unit volume, so
you'd get a factor of 12 drop in material cost per coin -- and then
you could even make the coin smaller!
The before-1980-inflation Israeli equivalent to a one-cent piece was
about a centimeter in diameter, made of aluminium with large scalloped
edges - very easy to identify. (Un)fortunately, they are all out of
current circulation because they don't buy anything in today's
economy.
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And then there were the Asimonim used in the gov't owned payphones.....
(not to be confused with the Isaac's)
obtransit: the Israeli buses back then used regular coins, not tokens.
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