I forgot that I have a U.S. note in my collection that is graded by PMG (shown below). It's an unremarkable obsolete note that I bought in spite of it being in a PMG holder, not because of it (I just love the design). The grade is F-15 and there is no mention of the note's several pinholes and one significant edge tear at the top of the leftmost vertical fold anywhere in the grade assessment. I guess this is why many sellers prefer PMG and why many collectors will not remove notes from PMG holders. Many, but not all.
After my previous post on BCS holders, I received an offer from a forum member willing to donate some empty PMG holders toward doing the Beilstein flame test for the detection of halide compounds in plastic. One use of adding halides to plastic is to make the plastic softer (i.e. less brittle and thus less susceptible to breakage). The down side of soft plastics like PVC is that chlorine is leached slowly over time. Paper in contact with PVC plastic over long periods of time can become damaged.
My interest in testing PMG holders is due to the close resemblance to BCS holders that I tested and for which results were reported in another thread. The main difference in the PMG holder is that the note is in direct contact with the housing, meaning there is no inner sleeve surrounding the note like in a BCS holder. The style of the packaging is very similar to BCS, and the plastic looks and feels the same. After posting this, I am going to remove the PMG note shown below from the holder and test it for halides via the Beilstein method.
{http://www.give-a-buck.com/special/allegany1-f.jpg}
{http://www.give-a-buck.com/special/allegany1-b.jpg}