After the die is chipped, all coins struck with that die will exhibit the same chip. Most times the die chip will get bigger as it is used. There...
You don't have to show us the whole toy box when you show us an item. Nor do you need to post the same post twice.
You have to assume it's authentic and judge the grade yourself to decide the value for insurance purposes.
Looks like underinking. Could be an erasure, though. FYI, paper money is not minted, it's printed. It's printed by the Bureau of Engraving and...
Yes.
Nice find.
Nice radar note. You might want to look here to find what a fancy serial (keeper) actually is. http://coolserialnumbers.com/FancySerialNumbers.aspx
Everyone but the OP knows that.
At the rate of 1 in 40, I wouldn't think they'd carry a premium.
Do paper recyclers still pay $1 a ton.
Keep them.
Uh...OK. :rolleyes: And the opposite die was raised? Sort of like the new Baseball Commemoratives.
Pi(e)?
It couldn't possibly come from the mint like that. PMD
Without a picture, we can't even be sure you have a $2 bill.
To purists, binary means all zeros and ones. To eBayers, a binary can be any two digits.
Yep!
TPGs will take coins from the mint case, but all coins in the case must go through the grading process.
MD
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