Author Topic: um... u can duplicate money  (Read 1866 times)

It has to be 51% in tact. We talked about this in my Economics class. The Treasury will take broken money as long as the bill is at least 51% in tact and return to you a new bill, so while a company is likely to reject your 2/3 of a bill, you can always mail it to the treasury and get a crisp new one.

droppin dat knowledge

... so about my idea of taking two bills and making them into three 2/3 bills

... so about my idea of taking two bills and making them into three 2/3 bills
That would work, but you must be unable to see the cut.

forget is wrong with benjamins lips
al big poppa franklin did back in the day was eat as much pusillanimous individual as humanly possible man

those lips come from years of chewin carpet


just like how you can produce infinite chocolate by cutting it in a certain way

let's share our wisdom some more, people

my brother forgot his money when going through a fast food restaurant so he gave the woman chinese yuan and told her it was a new type of dollar :l
she believed him.




^ not suspicious nope^

forget is wrong with benjamins lips
the original duck lips

It has to be a specific half in order to work I think

It has to be 51% in tact. We talked about this in my Economics class. The Treasury will take broken money as long as the bill is at least 51% in tact and return to you a new bill, so while a company is likely to reject your 2/3 of a bill, you can always mail it to the treasury and get a crisp new one.
What's the process of measuring the % of the bill that's intact?

What's the process of measuring the % of the bill that's intact?

No idea. It may be possible for you to rip a bill in a jagged way and have both halves considered 51%, but you'd have to succeed more than half the time for it to be worth it.

What's the process of measuring the % of the bill that's intact?
probably robot eyez that just compare it to a non-broken bill

I doubt most shops would accept such damaged notes though. There's basically no use to this of no bank or shop will take them.
The treasury might accept them for replacement, but that's a lot of hastle to go through. Especially if you have to pay for stamps to send it to them.

And I guess maybe it's suspicious if you have 2000 perfectly split notes being sent to the treasury or multiple regular amounts being mailed.

I also somewhat believe that leaving clean/intentional cuts will increase suspicion.