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#1
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![]() Not in the USA. Your notes are legal tender just about forever. //Although you would be an idiot to use a 1934 $100 Gold Certificate bill for cash. [img]/images/graemlins/smile.gif[/img] [/ QUOTE ] [ QUOTE ] [/ QUOTE ][ QUOTE ] [ QUOTE ] is there not a time scale to hand in old notes.like the old notes get withdrawn from circulation and cease to be legal tender? jow does it work in the usa? in britain when they change notes significantly you have to hand them back to the bank or your stuck with worthless bits of paper. [/ QUOTE ] i see i can see how its the number one counterfieted currncy in the world, pretty weird system if you ask me.maybe its cheaper to spend money catching fruadsters rather than burning old notes and printing new ones, thats a lot of $$$$ to print thinking about it now. |
#2
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If you like em, keep em. Not everything has to return a profit, some of you guys sound like used car salesman.
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#3
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this thread pretty much got choo choo'd
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#4
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Make a suit out of them.
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#5
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you got that old money
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#6
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you got that old money [/ QUOTE ] coulda bought a dinosaur |
#7
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Old, mass produced bills/coins aren't going to be worth much more in the future. If you like them, keep them - but your g/f is correct, you could be making money with that money. The exceptions I see are $500 bills and gold certificate bills.
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