I would say it's worth something, but how much I don't know. I would be interested though if you plan on letting it go in the future.
Excuse my ignorance, but how does this happen? Does that specific "Stamper" run out of ink? Does it just die completely?
I am not exactly sure but it seems like it would be an inking error. if you look at the first "9" there is a little ink splotch there. I also do not see any discoloration that would suggest that someone chemically removed the "1". Maybe someone else can chime in
I examined it closely under magnification and there appears to be no trace of the 1 being removed chemically or otherwise. Would it be worth sending it in to be graded or getting it appraised somewhere? If so, wheres the best place to go.?
"Would it be worth sending it in to be graded or getting it appraised somewhere?" In my opinion, yes. "If so, wheres the best place to go?" In my opinion, PCGS.
Does anyone else have a 1995 DC D2 position D330 face plate to compare? Maybe it affected multiple prints or its a one-shot. Perhaps some debris was in the way and prevented ink from adhereing.
I think it means he wandered into the Paper Money Forum to respond with the same quote I did but I beat him to it.
If you meant my "Came here to post this" then it means just about exactly the same thing as... :too-funny: If, on the other hand, you meant the original : Then see the movie Airplane, from 1980.
I would say no. The problem with this is that while it is interesting, it's not really that noticeable. It would not be considered a major error and I think it is worth less then what it would cost you to get it graded. (Around $25 plus shipping) You can buy mismatched serial numbers for less than $200 and that is considered a popular error. There is also a chance that there are a lot of these out there and they just have not been "noticed" that often yet. If it was me I would keep it for my error collection or if you do not collect them, then I would sell it but do not expect a lot for it.