What's the value

Discussion in 'Paper Money' started by GM Coin Hopper, Mar 16, 2019.

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Updating my collection is this worth keeping?

  1. yes or no

    3 vote(s)
    75.0%
  2. where the best place to get it graded

    1 vote(s)
    25.0%
  1. GM Coin Hopper

    GM Coin Hopper New Member

    Attached Files:

    Legomaster1 and Mernskeeter like this.
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  3. Mountain Man

    Mountain Man Well-Known Member

    What's on the other side? It appears to be a $5 bill that someone ran through a copy machine to print the face on the back, but if you sent it to a TPG and they authenticated it as real, it could be worth something to an error collector.
     
  4. GM Coin Hopper

    GM Coin Hopper New Member

    So your saying it's fake?
     
  5. Mountain Man

    Mountain Man Well-Known Member

    See my edited post.
     
  6. GM Coin Hopper

    GM Coin Hopper New Member

    Ok I have a counterfeit detector pen and it passed but I will send it away to be authenticated. Thank you
     
  7. Mountain Man

    Mountain Man Well-Known Member

    Think about the printing process. If it was an overprint, why would it be backwards. You still haven't shown the other side.
     
  8. Mountain Man

    Mountain Man Well-Known Member

  9. GM Coin Hopper

    GM Coin Hopper New Member

    I can show the other side
     

    Attached Files:

  10. rickmp

    rickmp Frequently flatulent.

    Those pens are absolutely useless.
    And they damage the note.
     
  11. SteveInTampa

    SteveInTampa Always Learning

    Looks to be a full front-to-back offset print error.

    Nice note.
     
  12. Collecting Nut

    Collecting Nut Borderline Hoarder

    Looks good to me. Before sending it in to be authenticated try taking it to your local coin shop and get their opinion. At five face I'd keep it either way.

    Welcome to CT.
     
  13. Dave M

    Dave M Francophiliac

    It's definitely a nice note and a keeper. But with the condition, I doubt getting it slabbed would be profitable, if that's your reason to do it.
     
  14. MeowtheKitty

    MeowtheKitty Well-Known Member

    Could it be that its is an image from the wet ink off of a sheet under it? Then that image would be backwards right?
     
  15. lettow

    lettow Senior Member

    No. This is not how this error is made. It is made when a sheet misfeeds and the plate comes in contact with the bed the sheet rests on. The image from the plate is transferred to the bed and gets picked up in reverse image on the opposite side of the next sheet.
     
  16. MEC2

    MEC2 Enormous Member

    Christ never use a counterfeit detection pen on a note you want to keep...

    And nobody, I mean nobody counterfeits $5 bills. At least since the 1950's...

    YES keep it it's $5 and an error probably worth a good $50.
     
    Legomaster1 likes this.
  17. MeowtheKitty

    MeowtheKitty Well-Known Member

    OK, well close enough. Same principle right? Meow thinks if it is real, it does have a good worth. As something so easy to spot should have never been put out into circulation; Compared to like a small die chip on a coin, that is so hard to spot no one cares much over such minor laws.
     
  18. mpcusa

    mpcusa "Official C.T. TROLL SWEEPER"

    Like the see through effect :)
     
    George McClellan likes this.
  19. NOS

    NOS Former Coin Hoarder

    You'd be surprised what people will counterfeit. One time I watched a television program from the year 2000 and someone used a counterfeit $5 note at a mall that was only printed on the front side! In about 2008 I found a torn $5 bill in a casino parking lot that turned out to be fake. I believe someone attempted to use it in a slot machine and tore it when they realized it was fake and couldn't be used. Then in about 2012 I was given some ones that were collected as part of a fundraiser and there was a low quality counterfeit $1 note in the batch! In each case low grade copiers were used for their production.
     
    Stevearino likes this.
  20. MEC2

    MEC2 Enormous Member

    People sit on copiers and makes Xerox's of their ass, that doesn't make them involved in human cloning any more than photocopies count as counterfeiting - I reckon I am referring to true counterfeiting and not mere copying. To that end, you just don't see folks investing in things under $20's and really $50's and $100's since it makes little sense to go to all that production work for something that you could have gotten bagging groceries in the same time.
     
    yartiques likes this.
  21. George McClellan

    George McClellan Active Member

    Great Lincoln's ghost! How common is that?
    Spooky, haunting...
    Google: lincoln and spiritualism
     
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