So 1933Z, did you make a match? Have you submitted a list of your 2013B*'s to the project organizers?
I believe the database now has over 11 thousand notes listed in it.
It not too late everyone, if your a note collector this can be very fun and exciting to compare what you have to the master list. Mr. Karol Winograd will email you a copy of the current list after each update he puts together. You just have to email him your list, and you will be added to the group email. Mr. Zegers and Mr. Winograd are both very friendly and enthusiastic about this project and love to share information.
As mentioned earlier, four other matched pairs are still at PMG right now being graded, and when they are back I will do my best to upload their images for everyone to see.
Well hello everyone, It's been awhile since I had new news to post. I will put more detail in the big thread about the 2013B* duplicate notes section, but here's the front of three, and back of the fourth matched pairs that just got back from grading. So we now have 8 known matched pairs in the world, and 6 of them have been graded. Please join in!
Great 1993Z, then you will get the spreadsheet and can do quick lookups to compare future notes you acquire and send data in on. I use it as a reference when I'm looking at notes on ebay to see if there's one already there. That's how I've made a match before when I bought a BEP pack that contained a matching note to one already on the list. Good job staying involved in this project, good luck!
If I can get them for a low enough price, I get them, send the data to the project organizers, and hope for a match. However, if I can find a full BEP pack of them, I do whatever I can to get the whole pack. What I did for this last match, was use the entire project spreadsheet to look up notes I come across to see if it's counterpart has already been found, in this case it had been so I bought the matching note from the store in Germany. No matched pairs have ever been offered for sale yet, so no predictors there. But future value for an individual note not paired up, I don't see that having any special future value. But there's the issue, say you had the chance to get the DC note 12345678, passed on it, then later someone adds the FW note 12345678 to the project, then that's a lost out matched pair. Does that make sense? I think I have over 6000 of these notes, hoping to make matches against the odds, of this rare error by the BEP. To me, the value is in the sense of accomplishment as a collector, in beating the odds and bringing together two notes that shouldn't exist together. Sorry I can't help put a monetary value to it or it's future value.
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