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Replies: 24 / Views: 4,430 |
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New Member
 Australia
40 Posts |
First I would like to say thanks to all for sharing of knowledge . much obliged . I would try to post high resolution pic asap .
and Broken coin you no doubt have excellent collection .
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New Member
 Australia
40 Posts |
I have found this note in my change from local shop .
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Pillar of the Community
Australia
1607 Posts |
Any better pics WangWang ? 
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New Member
 Australia
40 Posts |
Thanks guys I have been able to take few more close pictures . I hope it helps .  
Edited by WangWang 12/22/2015 01:15 am
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Pillar of the Community
Australia
1607 Posts |
OK please correct me if I'm wrong but would'nt the whole sheet have been like this note, so in this case 45 notes should have this anomaly ?
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New Member
 Australia
40 Posts |
You might be very right on this Appleangel07
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Pillar of the Community
United States
4963 Posts |
It looks to me like CB 07990034 over CB 07993633.
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Pillar of the Community
Australia
1607 Posts |
So 3,599 numbers apart 
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Formerly nancyc
Australia
5385 Posts |
Quote: So 3,599 numbers apart More to the point, probably 80 pages apart. Makes one wonder how it could happen. 
life is a mystery to be lived not a problem to be solved
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Valued Member
Australia
369 Posts |
A bored graphic design student with a blue texta, maybe?
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1812 Posts |
I agree the serial number is CB 07993633 under CB 07990034 as serial numbers are printed down, then when cut and stacked, they are in numerical order... I know USA Currency serial number skip-numbering and assigned Plate Positions by serial number...
I do not know Australia's Currency serial number system used, and if they follow The Bank of England £20 error note, the first 2 digits are the Plate Position, and the following 6 numbers are the same on the 40 subject sheet...
If the same holds true for Australia's Currency, and there are 45 notes per sheet, my guess is that this is from Plate Position 7 and the other 44 notes would have the same last 6 numbers from both printings on the sheet (unless they cut the sheets in sections ((USA COPE cuts 32 subject sheets in half vertically before serialing a 1/2 sheet of 16 notes)) prior to numbering), then the number would be less.
What I don't understand is, if the sheet entered the numbering system twice, there should be the same double serial numbers on both sides, yet the left side looks like it never received a 2nd set of serial numbers..
The owner of this note should take high resolution photos of both sides and eMail them to whoever prints Australian Currency and ask them for verification of this error...
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Pillar of the Community
Australia
2180 Posts |
In Australia the 07 indicates the year (2007) and the rest of the numbers are shared by the entire sheet (I don't think sheets are subdivided). Not sure how many notes to a $10 sheet but it varies by denomination. It's possible the other numbers are doubled - kind of looks like it but thetwo serial numbers are in different fonts.
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Formerly nancyc
Australia
5385 Posts |
Quote: Not sure how many notes to a $10 sheet but it varies by denomination. $10 has 45 per sheet.
life is a mystery to be lived not a problem to be solved
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
1463 Posts |
That's a great error, one to get graded I would suggest.
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New Member
 Australia
40 Posts |
Thanks everyone I will definately get it graded asap . ...
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Replies: 24 / Views: 4,430 |
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