Specimen bill

Discussion in 'Paper Money' started by pjl112, Apr 20, 2012.

  1. clayirving

    clayirving Supporter**

    Thanks for the additional information. I can't imagine how much the rollover pair of A99999999A/A00000000A must be worth. I saw a Series 1928C $5 Legal Tender G99999999A/H00000001A rollover pair listed for $45,000.

    The last four notes (the "Face Specimens" with blank backs) are from the Heritage Auction link that Steve posted.
     
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  3. clayirving

    clayirving Supporter**

    Oops. Duplicate posting.
     
  4. tbudwiser

    tbudwiser Active Member

    This is all very intriguing; but where are the pictures of the $20 that started this whole thread?
     
    GoldFinger1969 and NOS like this.
  5. Numbers

    Numbers Senior Member

    Okay, but I'm very puzzled as to why the BEP would print specimen notes with such an obvious difference from the actual issue. Doesn't that rather defeat the purpose of specimens? :confused:
     
  6. Dave M

    Dave M Francophiliac

    This could simply be PCGS being rather loose with the term Specimen. That's my guess.

    Dave
     
  7. Gigi Maurice

    Gigi Maurice New Member

    I recently received a $20 bill that says copy money in front and specimen in the back can anyone explain
     
  8. lettow

    lettow Senior Member

    Not without a picture of both sides.
     
    NOS likes this.
  9. deucheney

    deucheney Member

  10. Brendan Meehan

    Brendan Meehan New Member

    I don't think that $20 FRN specimen with "copy money" is from the BEP.
     
    Last edited: Jan 3, 2020
  11. SteveInTampa

    SteveInTampa Always Learning

    I found this article with the same note.

    4AE280DB-A6A5-41B1-9D41-5D5E33EBAF28.jpeg
     
  12. Brendan Meehan

    Brendan Meehan New Member

    Similar notes are legitimately used in China to train bank tellers, cashiers and casino employees. Unfortunately, they look good enough that a busy store clerk would easily miss them.

    Would be better if the "training money" looked more like Monopoly notes! :)
     
  13. Collecting Nut

    Collecting Nut Borderline Hoarder

    Notes with SPECIMEN on them are used for training people that handle money. They are also sent to banks to note and train people on a new bill.
     
  14. Brendan Meehan

    Brendan Meehan New Member

    PCGS has supposedly graded a few sets of uniface specimens bearing solid zero serial numbers on the front with blank backs. The fronts were paired with reverses that also had blank backs.

    Years ago, a set from San Francisco sold at Heritage for around $12-$13K with the buyer's premium. I've heard mixed opinions whether or not uniface are legal to own, though I imagine BEP policy is similar to other early small-sized specimens kicking around.
     
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