
The repeaters that have a decent added value include where the second four digits is a repetition of the first four digits such as 1223 1223 or 6266 6266. A super repeater is a repeater in which the first two digits are repeated four times. Examples like 26262626 and 78787878. What you have is quad 1s (4 1s in a row). You can check ebay sold listings to see if quads are selling to casual collectors, but usually its 7 of a kind/7 in a row or 8 of a kind that get the interest of serious collectors while 5 or 6 of a kind appeal to some casual collectors for a few bucks over face value. If you look regularly quads come up pretty often and so therefore dont appeal as much to collectors once they have a few. The value is mainly due to some bills having increased rarity in finding them: http://www.coolserialnumbers.com/Ho...lNumbers.pdf
Condition ultimately will also play a part where uncirculated bills tend to have higher value than those found circulated with wear.
The two-dollar bill is one of the most rarely seen in circulation and actual use. They are almost never given as change anymore for commercial transactions, and thus consumers rarely have them on hand. There seems to be a lack of public knowledge now that the bill is even still in production and circulation and accepted in all those vending and self checkout machines etc. People are apparently hording them thinking wrongly they are rarer and more valuable than they are. Although they are generally available at most banks if you go and ask, two-dollar notes are usually not handed out except upon specific request by the customer, and may require the teller to make a trip to the vault, or order the desired amount if not present at the branch.
Edited by datadragon
12/09/2022 9:41 pm
12/09/2022 9:41 pm