Serial number Ending in X

Discussion in 'Paper Money' started by Jackal42, Aug 31, 2014.

  1. Jackal42

    Jackal42 Member

    I scan the drawers at work for stars, low numbers and older dates and came across an 88 dollar bill F56194192X. Are X's very common?
     
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  3. jlogan

    jlogan Well-Known Member

    an $88 bill? must be counterfeit lol
    i believe that X's are no more valuable than any other letter (assuming you are talking about a 1988 $1 bill)
     
    geekpryde likes this.
  4. ejs54

    ejs54 New Member

    1988 bills in circulation are pretty uncommon at this point in time. X is also a higher and uncommon block letter. If someone is looking to complete some sort of a set, they may give you $2 to $3 for it if the condition is really nice. If you scan bills at work your better off letting this one go for another * note in lower production.
     
  5. Jackal42

    Jackal42 Member

    Ok I was curious, the X was an eye catcher. Best find so far is a 2006* $10, total run of 768,000. And a 1963* $1 bill, minor wallet dent but other than that it's crisp. Hard to find production numbers from that far back but I got it for a buck.
     
  6. SteveInTampa

    SteveInTampa Always Learning

    NOS likes this.
  7. Crobar

    Crobar New Member

    I've got a 2009 X ending one, is that special ? ? L beginning ? ? ? ?
     
  8. SteveInTampa

    SteveInTampa Always Learning

    It depends on condition. I know several collectors looking for a 2009 $1 L-X note, but they are holding out for a CU example. A little over 12 million were printed.

    8E718D4B-2808-4C51-998B-C855A0EFDFF2.jpeg
     
    Baryoung and NOS like this.
  9. Ripd4life

    Ripd4life New Member

    When you say cu whats thats
     
  10. Legomaster1

    Legomaster1 Cointalk Patron

    CU means “crisp uncirculated”
     
  11. mpcusa

    mpcusa "Official C.T. TROLL SWEEPER"

    It,s common though sounds kind of exciting...LOL
     
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