Nope. Not fancy. http://coolserialnumbers.com/FancySerialNumbers.aspx http://oldcurrencyvalues.com/serial_numbers/
Generally, you need the following to generate any interest: Good stuff 8 of a kind Full ladder 12345678, 01234567, etc S/N less than 00000010 Good but should be in high grades 7 of a kind S/N less than 00000100 partial ladder 1234567x, etc May Generate interest in high grades Radar. ex 12344321 Repeater. ex 12341234 True binary - s/n with serial number digits of o and 1 only If your lucky, maybe a pseudo binary in which the s/n has only 2 digits, i.e., only 3 and 6 Dealers and serious collectors would not usually be interested in anything else. Maybe you could get lucky and find some uniformed newbie to buy other things like zip codes and birthday bills on ebay, but don't get your hopes up
That would fall under the category of almost cool serial number but definitely not fancy. But 2 different years signifying what? That's the question. It's 2 random years.. Kind of boring Now if it were 1776 1976.. That would be amazing symbolizing the Bicentennial.. Get it?
I recall hearing a story about someone at the BEP pulling a sheet of $2 with the s/n 17761976 to present to Gerald Ford when they first started making the FRN notes in 1976. This was done outside of the normal production process and they didn't replace the sheet with a Star sheet, so it screwed up the subsequent cutting by shorting all of the stacks 1 note. I just tried to google it but couldn't find any confirmation. Can anybody confirm this story, or has my "little red choo choo gone around the bend" and I'm succumbing to old age?
maybe if it was a significant date, i.e. 07041776, 09112001 or somebody's birthdate, but those would not qualify as fancy, just interesting