Yes. It has plastified $20 and $50 bills, as well as regular, paper bills of $100, $200, $500 and $1000 denominations.
Standard US paper bills weigh 1 gram so 50 $20 bills would weigh 50 gm.
The US currently prints bills in the following denominations: $1, $2, $5, $10, $20, $50, and $100.
As of 2016, the U.S. produces bills for 1, 2, 5, 10, 20, 50, and 100 dollars.
Andrew Jackson has appeared on all of the following U.S. currency bills...$5, $10, $20, $50, $1000 (Confederacy), and $10,000 bills.
Mathematically they have equal value, assuming that a 50 dollar bill has the same mass (weight) as a 20 dollar bill. Think of it like this: let's say that there is a quantity (N) bills in 1 pound (lb).The 20 lb bag has 20*N bills; each bill worth 50, so 20*N*50 = 1000*N.50 lb bag has 50*N bills; each bill worth 20, so 50*N*20 = 1000*N.On a practical note, each one has an advantage, which may or may not be of different 'worth' to the user. The 20 pound bag will definitely be easier to carry around than the 50 pound bag, but then $20 bills should be easier to spend than $50 bills.
1000/20=50 bills
30
50
50
it would take 50 20 dollar bills to make a thousand dollars.
25 20-dollar bills makes 50 dollars.