CPM Forum
Special => Special Serial Number Notes => Topic started by: rodsodd on August 19, 2005, 12:05:10 am
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Hello everyone!
My wife spotted this bill today. It is a UNC 2002 Journey $5 Jenkins - Dodge # HNZ 5675765. My Question is, is this a normal radar note? I know if the middle 5 was an 8 it would be worth a fair bit, but would this have a little higher premium due to the numbers ascending & descending.
Thanks for any information on this.
Rodney.
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Hello Rod.
You are correct about it being worth more if the centre number was an 8 - a type of ladder note.
There really is no general premium over regular radars for this note based on the outer 3 digits though. At least at this time, the collecting community has not specifically highlighted notes with a pattern such as this.
Still a nice find nevertheless. Only one per 1000 notes is a radar.
Good luck in your searching.
Hudson :)
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Still a nice find nevertheless. Only one per 100 notes is a radar.
Correction: There are 10,000,000 notes per prefix, and counting all 1,2,3- and 4-digit radars, there are 9999 radars per prefix. This means approximately 1 note per 10,000 is a radar. Still though, there are TONS of radars out there.
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Lol. Correction again:
Statistically, One per 1000 are radars (former post is edited). I missed the third zero.
Not one in 10,000 though ;)
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Duh, yes... 1 in 1,000. There are 10,000 per 10,000,000, so that's one in 1,000. All these zeros can be confusing.
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Thank you for the information.
My wife said I was crazy inspecting every bill I get, but now she is doing it ;D.
Thanks again.
Rodney.