Is it a counterfeit?

Discussion in 'Paper Money' started by erdongdatian, Aug 23, 2020.

  1. erdongdatian

    erdongdatian New Member

    I have seen a bill with serial number 99999999 on Youtube. It's a series 2003A $1 bill. I don't understand why its serial number can reach 99999999. According to BEP's website, let take the series 2003A $1 bill as example, serial numbers above 96000000 are not used. Is it possible that this bill comes from the uncut sheet? If it is the case, this 99999999 note, is it as valuable as those solid 9's appearing on some old notes? solid 9.jpg
     
    capthank and alurid like this.
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. furryfrog02

    furryfrog02 Well-Known Member

    @SteveInTampa You are the resident expert IMO. It is an interesting note. What say you?
     
  4. SorenCoins

    SorenCoins Well-Known Member

    I have no idea since I am not very experienced in bills, but I am putting my comment here to hear what others say. Interesting topic.
     
    capthank likes this.
  5. alurid

    alurid Well-Known Member

  6. Kentucky

    Kentucky Supporter! Supporter

    I wanna know too!
     
  7. Robert Ransom

    Robert Ransom Well-Known Member

    I'm onboard too.
     
  8. thomas mozzillo

    thomas mozzillo Well-Known Member

    Welcome to Coin Talk. Interesting post. I have no info, just following this thread.
     
    SorenCoins and Robert Ransom like this.
  9. SteveInTampa

    SteveInTampa Always Learning

    Definitely from a sheet. It sold a couple of years ago in 2018 for $12K. Awesome note and definitely not a counterfeit.

    302687A6-4202-476F-B249-C6EEAFDB38E3.jpeg 141FE0D1-FF3C-4305-891C-3CA535FEEDF2.jpeg
     
    fretboard, midas1, SorenCoins and 3 others like this.
  10. Robert Ransom

    Robert Ransom Well-Known Member

    SorenCoins and Stevearino like this.
  11. erdongdatian

    erdongdatian New Member

    Thank you for your information.
     
    fretboard, SorenCoins and capthank like this.
  12. CaptHenway

    CaptHenway Survivor

    Neat!

    I think that if I had that uncut sheet I would have kept it intact, but that's just me.
     
    SorenCoins, TheFinn and capthank like this.
  13. Jersey magic man

    Jersey magic man Supporter! Supporter

    If this bill was cut from a sheet, does that somehow affect its value? It was not issued from the BEP that way! Has it been “altered”?
     
    SorenCoins and capthank like this.
  14. erdongdatian

    erdongdatian New Member

    Good question! I also want to know.
     
    SorenCoins and capthank like this.
  15. erdongdatian

    erdongdatian New Member

    I believe I would do the same way.
     
    SorenCoins likes this.
  16. SteveInTampa

    SteveInTampa Always Learning

    A lot of notes are cut from collector sheets with no penalty whatsoever. If the BEP prints them, and they’re legal tender, game on. All of the series 2004A $10 Atlanta stars that you see as individual notes were cut from collector sheets. 100% of them.

    14E7BD6E-5E33-42F5-A2AC-DC4BBF56773B.jpeg
     
    SorenCoins and capthank like this.
  17. Collecting Nut

    Collecting Nut Borderline Hoarder

    Those higher numbers are reserved for the BEP uncut sheets. It makes the bill easily identifiable. Yes it's real.
     
    SorenCoins likes this.
  18. Mr.Q

    Mr.Q Well-Known Member

    Welcome to CT you lucky devil...
     
    SorenCoins likes this.
  19. SteveInTampa

    SteveInTampa Always Learning

    You have to do your homework though. Times are a changing down at the BEP. The new $1 50-subject collector sheets can be random serial numbers, as seen on this chart.

    9E6E76F5-0029-4BC5-A378-4EFABD6E99B3.jpeg
     
    SorenCoins, NOS and Collecting Nut like this.
  20. TheFinn

    TheFinn Well-Known Member

    You need a steady hand and good eye in the cutter. Obviously it was downgraded due to margin alignment.
     
    SorenCoins and NOS like this.
  21. SorenCoins

    SorenCoins Well-Known Member

    I am surprised that cutting it would not result in any "details" grade if there is an equivalent in bills. Wouldn't that sheet be much more valuable left in-tact with many high serial bills? To me, cutting out a bill sounds like removing a mintmark, or peeling off a retained lamination, clamshell lamination, or breaking a cracked planchet to make a "mated pair." But, I'm not the expert, so maybe it's acceptable despite the anthropogenic interference!
    Well that's really interesting. Can you find them in circulation sometimes? Bills cut out of sheets kind of sound like the paper money equivalent of proof coins in circulation. Interesting.
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page