which of these would you keep?

Discussion in 'Paper Money' started by kdkenn, May 14, 2009.

  1. kdkenn

    kdkenn Bank Employee

    I bought these from my drawer at work. I've had a stack sitting for awhile and wanted to bring them home to see if they are keepers.

    $1 2003 A Philadelphia Cabral, Snow C 06705538*
    $1 2003 A New York Cabral, Snow B 00212186*
    $1 2003 A Richmond Cabral, Snow D 00008488 A
    $1 2003 A Richmond Cabral, Snow D 00004338 A
    $1 2006 New York Cabral, Paulson B 03960163*
    $1 2006 New York Cabral, Paulson B 03962329*
    $1 2006 Atlanta Cabral, Paulson F 70777770 F (this is my favorite of these listed)
    $1 2006 Atlanta Cabral, Paulson F 01710171 E
    $1 2006 Atlanta Cabral, Paulson F 00089873*
    $1 2006 Chicago Cabral, Paulson G 00066960*
    $1 2006 Chicago Cabral, Paulson G 03071597*
    $5 2006 Atlanta Cabral, Paulson HF 00003488 B
     
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  3. Daggarjon

    Daggarjon Supporter**

    keep them all.. for those you dont want -- PM me :)

    as a side note.. any star with 3 or moe 0's is nice :) for short print runs, which of course would fetch more of a premium.. check out www.uspapermoney.info/serials
     
  4. the_man12

    the_man12 Amateur Photographer

    I agree. Keep them all!
     
  5. dursin

    dursin Senior Member

    I'd keep any of those that were in VF or better condition.
     
  6. TheNoost

    TheNoost huldufolk

    I agree, keep them all. Do you look at $2's very often?
     
  7. Magman

    Magman U.S. Money Collector

    Since they're ones, keep them all.
    The 5, it has 4 zeros, so I'd keep that too.

    And yeah, that Seven-Zero note is nice!
    Lets see a picture :D
     
  8. kdkenn

    kdkenn Bank Employee

    You know I've looked at this site so many time and I guess that I'm stupid cuz I can't figure it out. LOL
     
  9. kdkenn

    kdkenn Bank Employee

    I will try to post a picture tomorrow. Tonight has not been a good night so not up to messing with it right now.
     
  10. mark_h

    mark_h Somewhere over the rainbow

    Okay let me see if i get this for the 2003A $1 (C 06705538*
    )star note you would click on 2003A, then scroll to the right and find star notes. Move down to your run

    C 000 00001 *
    C 032 00000 * May 07

    C 032 00001 *
    C 035 20000 * Jul 07

    C 064 00001 *
    C 070 08000 * Jan 08

    So yours came from a run of 600k or so. Now I think I read some where that a short run was something like 160K. Please wait for an expert I just wanted to see how I did.
     
  11. kdkenn

    kdkenn Bank Employee


    Okay so is this the way you are looking at it? This would be my run right?
    C 064 00001 *
    C 070 08000 *

    Then you just take the difference between the bottom and top numbers (subtract) and that is how large the run is?
     
  12. dursin

    dursin Senior Member

    I like the one with the 7's and 0's too....I bought this note a few months ago just because I liked the serial number.
    [​IMG]
     
  13. kdkenn

    kdkenn Bank Employee

    That is really neat. I have another $1 serial number 00000777 I like 0's and 7's
     
  14. kdkenn

    kdkenn Bank Employee

    We get 2's and I have some in my vault at work but I don't pay much attention to them unless they are old. Why? Something you are looking for?
     
  15. dursin

    dursin Senior Member

    I like 7's and I guess 0's too because they don't take away from the 7's! :)
     
  16. Daggarjon

    Daggarjon Supporter**

    Yes, that would give you that particular print run, or at least monthly total. Its better to look at the total number of notes printed...

    in this example:
    C 000 00001 *
    C 032 00000 * May 07

    C 032 00001 *
    C 035 20000 * Jul 07

    C 064 00001 *
    C 070 08000 * Jan 08


    there was a gap generated between July of 07 and Jan of 08. So instead of a total printing as of that date being 7,008,000 ... you would have to subtract the gap of 3,200,000 notes ... so the total is really 3,808,000.

    Basicaly, when looking at the total printings, always look for possible gaps in the serial numbers.
     
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