well, since the average $20 bill is 0.3mm thick, 1,000,000 of them would be 30m tall
:D
Two thousand $500 dollar bills?... Depends on the size of the can Of course. If you have a large coffee can and your million is not in bills but in the form of bonds or Certificates of Deposit, for example. You can definitely have a million dollars or even more in a coffee can. You can probably even have a million dollars if you have a VERY large can and EACH bill is worth $1,000.00, in which case you would only need 1,000 bills to make $1,000,000.00
American currency is approximately 6.125" long x 2.625" wide x 0.004" thick. The base of a standard shipping pallet is 40" x 48". So, you can lay out the bills 6 wide and 18 across, or one layer of 108 bills. With 50,000 $20-dollar bills, (1 million bucks), that will be a layer of 463 bills deep. At 0.004" thick, that's a height of less than 2 inches high (1-7/8, really). Not very impressive looking at all. If you are considering shipping a 36-inch high stack, that would be about 975,000 bills. In twenties, that 3-ft high stack would be about 19.5 million bucks. But let's dream big. If they were hundreds, you'd be looking at 97.5 million.
Regardless of denomination, all current US paper bills are the same size (156 mm x 66.3 mm)
There are 100 US $1 bills in a bank strap. All bills are put in straps of 100, then bundles of 10 straps, and 4 bundles, to form a "brick" of 4000 bills. The use of $50 bundles and other sizes are for customer convenience. When circulated one-dollar bills are bundled, the bundle size can be 25, 50, 100, 200, 0r 250 for one-dollar bills, using color-coded straps that are, respectively, black, orange, blue, green, and pink.
The US didn't print any bills dated 1925. Please check again and post a new question that includes the bill's seal color.The nearest dates are 1922 (large size bills) and 1928 (small size bills) but neither of these were silver certificates. The last $100 silver certificates are dated 1891.
1000000/100 = 10000, that is you would have a stack of 10,000 hundred dollar bills.
The answer depends on the size of the class room as well as the size of the ten dollar bills. Many countries use dollars as their currency and have ten dollar bills. These are not all the same size!
All U.S. bills currently in circulation are the same size.
How many 100 dollar bills can fit in a carton depends on the size of the carton.
Two thousand $500 dollar bills?... Depends on the size of the can Of course. If you have a large coffee can and your million is not in bills but in the form of bonds or Certificates of Deposit, for example. You can definitely have a million dollars or even more in a coffee can. You can probably even have a million dollars if you have a VERY large can and EACH bill is worth $1,000.00, in which case you would only need 1,000 bills to make $1,000,000.00
One million dollars in ten-dollar bills would weigh 220.5 pounds. It would make a continuous stack almost 36 feet tall, or it could be rearranged into a cube with 18-foot sides. You can get more cash dimensions and cash size and weight conversions at http://www.cashdimensions.com/
They printed small size (aka modern size) bills for 1928, 1934, and 1934A. Large size $500 bills were printed for many different years between 1862 and 1922.
Depends on the size of the briefcase. how about a briefcase 24 x 16 x 8? and the dimensions of the of a typical $100 stack of 20s are 6 in x 2.5 in x 5/8 in.
About 26 wide by 22 high
In one dollar bills. One million dollars is approximatley 4,300 inches and it weighs 2,200 pounds. The height and weight may vary as much as 10 percent if you have an older bill than a newer bill.
American currency is approximately 6.125" long x 2.625" wide x 0.004" thick. The base of a standard shipping pallet is 40" x 48". So, you can lay out the bills 6 wide and 18 across, or one layer of 108 bills. With 50,000 $20-dollar bills, (1 million bucks), that will be a layer of 463 bills deep. At 0.004" thick, that's a height of less than 2 inches high (1-7/8, really). Not very impressive looking at all. If you are considering shipping a 36-inch high stack, that would be about 975,000 bills. In twenties, that 3-ft high stack would be about 19.5 million bucks. But let's dream big. If they were hundreds, you'd be looking at 97.5 million.
No, all US bills regardless of denomination are the same size. This makes them easier to handle by machines.