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Replies: 78 / Views: 12,771 |
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
4594 Posts |
Quote: All of them were ultimately destroyed and these new bills got a 2009 A series date. Not certain they will be destroyed, in fact BEP has maintained the opposite... Quoting from the well respected serial # site, http://www.uspapermoney.info/serials/f2009_h.html: This series was the first printing of the colorised $100 FRN, but due to production problems, no notes of this series have been released. These notes are still in storage at the BEP, awaiting re-inspection for printing errors, and it is expected that many of them will eventually be issued. In the meantime, $100 notes of the colorised design were first released into circulation on October 8, 2013, but all of those notes were Series 2009A, not Series 2009.
-----Burton 50+ year / Life / Emeritus ANA member (joined 12/1/1973) Life member: Numismatics International, CONECA Member: TNA, FtWCC, NETCC, EveryCountry (online) coin club Owned by three cats and a wife of 40+ years (joined 1983) Author: 3rd Edition of the Sample Slabs book, https://www.sampleslabs.info/
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
4594 Posts |
-----Burton 50+ year / Life / Emeritus ANA member (joined 12/1/1973) Life member: Numismatics International, CONECA Member: TNA, FtWCC, NETCC, EveryCountry (online) coin club Owned by three cats and a wife of 40+ years (joined 1983) Author: 3rd Edition of the Sample Slabs book, https://www.sampleslabs.info/
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Moderator
 United States
189673 Posts |
I do not have a photo, but I got to handle and examine a new $100 at lunch today. Pretty cool. I also confirmed that the paper over the strip is not attached. 
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Pillar of the Community
United States
7632 Posts |
I like all hundreds..... New, old.....doesn't matter to me!
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Valued Member
Austria
391 Posts |
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Valued Member
United States
486 Posts |
What makes you think that those $ 100.'s are a different series ? I seem to see them as all the same series, hard to see for sure but they all look like Series 2009-A. And what are all the "lots of variations" that you have found ?. Bill Collector
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Valued Member
Austria
391 Posts |
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Valued Member
Austria
391 Posts |
And From one collector : Quote: I was reading in the papers a couple of weeks ago that there are collectors of these New Bills. Not only for the low numbers but for repeating numbers,consecutive numbers and I forgot the others but these $100 bills could be worth $1000 EACH in the secondary collectors market. Just passing along the info. Good luck on your hunt! :ThumbsUp; This is the only bill that interests me and now I'm building the collection to be built on numbers and letters and I will see where the project will take - SEE THE LINK - Lol : http://www.uspapermoney.info/serials/f2009ah.html------------------------------------------------------------------------ http://math.about.com/od/algebra/a/consecutive.htmWhat Are Consecutive Numbers? Algebra problems often ask about properties of consecutive numbers. Consecutive means numbers like 1, 2, 3 or 9, 10, 11. 3, 6, 9 are not consecutive numbers, but are consecutive multiples of 3. Basically it means that the numbers are adjacent integers. A question may also ask about consecutive even numbers or consecutive odd numbers. These are numbers like 2, 4, 6, 8, 10 or 13, 15, 17. We take one odd number, then the very next odd number after, etc.
Edited by Cmcart 12/10/2013 5:15 pm
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Valued Member
Austria
391 Posts |
One conclusion I have: This bill is just perfect - as perfect as my CC DMPL   
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Valued Member
United States
486 Posts |
Well I guess I'm to old to learn this new way of currency collecting.
You say "Lots Series - lots of numbers - lots of variations"
I checked out the link and still only see two series of the new $ 100., the 2009 and the 2009-A. And to the best of my knowledge no one has ever seen a 2009 series in the wild.
As to "lots of numbers", well all newer bills have at least 8 numbers so that's not unusual.
When you say lots of "variations", again all bills have some "variations", some minor and some major. For most something like a major variation would be one from the DC printing facility and one from the FW printing facility, so far none have showed up from the DC printing in the wild.
As to the letters, again most all newer bills have letters, each District Bank has there own letter and it's printed in with the serial number, there are only 12 District Banks so only 12 letters are used for that. Again not at all unusual, just normal for all newer bills.
I really don't see what your trying to do or the idea behind your collecting but I wish you luck in your collecting, keep us posted on how it works out for you. Bill Collector
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Valued Member
Austria
391 Posts |
Edited by Cmcart 12/11/2013 4:54 pm
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Valued Member
Austria
391 Posts |
 So far I have not seen new 100$ with Fancy Serial Numbers OR cool Serial Numbers  This particular market is in deep sleep lol http://coolserialnumbers.com/FancyS...Numbers.aspx2 New bills  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federal_Reserve_BankThe Federal Reserve officially identifies Districts by number and Reserve Bank city.[16] 1st District (A) - Federal Reserve Bank of Boston 2nd District (B) - Federal Reserve Bank of New York 3rd District (C) - Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia 4th District (D) - Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, with branches in Cincinnati, Ohio and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 5th District (E) - Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, with branches in Baltimore, Maryland and Charlotte, North Carolina 6th District (F) - Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, with branches in Birmingham, Alabama; Jacksonville, Florida; Miami, Florida; Nashville, Tennessee; and New Orleans, Louisiana 7th District (G) - Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, with a branch in Detroit, Michigan 8th District (H) - Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, with branches in Little Rock, Arkansas; Louisville, Kentucky; and Memphis, Tennessee 9th District (I) - Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, with a branch in Helena, Montana 10th District (J) - Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, with branches in Denver, Colorado; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma; and Omaha, Nebraska 11th District (K) - Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, with branches in El Paso, Texas; Houston, Texas; and San Antonio, Texas 12th District (L) - Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, with branches in Los Angeles, California; Portland, Oregon; Salt Lake City, Utah; and Seattle, Washington
Edited by Cmcart 12/13/2013 05:06 am
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Valued Member
Austria
391 Posts |
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Valued Member
United States
486 Posts |
Cmcart, I see that your starting to learn a lot about US currency, and that's a good thing. I would recommend that you buy a few books on collecting currency, one of the better ones would be Paper Money of the United States by the Friedberg's, it's sort of the bible of currency collecting. Has just about everything a new currency collector needs to know in it, including the terminology such as Series, etc.
As to fancy numbers on the new $ 100.s there are a lot of them out there now and anyone that's serious about collecting currency numbers can have one or two. Your just not looking in the right places.
I don't collect currency numbers myself I collect US currency, by Type, Series Year, and Denomination, from $ 1.00 to $ 100.00 with a $ 500.00 and a $ 1000.00 every once in awhile. If they happen to have a low or odd number so be it, but I don;t go looking for them. I do know that a lot of the members here do collect them and a few of them are really advanced into them. Bill Collector
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Valued Member
Austria
391 Posts |
Hi First thank you  - all those who teach - I'm educated - thanks!   What to do, I am new in bills - I'm interested only in the new 100$ bills and its numbers -  I would be happy if you send me a link to a dealer / dealers who have bills that interest me 
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Replies: 78 / Views: 12,771 |