Well if you have more than half a $ bill than there worth the same. But if its les its nothing.
no
Absolutely not.
Obviously worth two dollars.
Many of these bills have been cut as described on purpose to perform illusions. These bills were cut from uncut sheets purchased from the Bureau of Engraving and Printing.
The US dollar bill is 2.6" by 6.1". So in terms of width, 20.5/6.1 = 3.36 dollar bills can fit along one side of the wall. In terms of height, 37/2.6 = 14.23 dollar bills can fit along the other side of the wall. I'm rounding up to 4 dollar bills in width and 15 for height (some will need to be cut). So for the whole area, 4*15 = 60 dollar bills total.
US money is not printed on paper. The paper in U.S. banknotes is made of a 75% cotton and 25% linen mixture.Read more: How_many_trees_are_cut_down_annually_to_produce_US_dollar_bills
Unlike currency in places like England and the EU, U.S. bills are notorious for being unevenly cut. Unless the bills are so far off-center that part of the image of another bill is visible, they're only worth face value. You have a sequential set because bills are printed on large sheets of paper, so any offset cut will affect all bills on that side of the sheet.
20 Nickels
Most vending machines can be upgraded to accept dollar bills, you might have to cut a hole for the acceptor and purchase a new coin mechanism, harness and dollar bill acceptor, and bezel for the acceptor. If you don't have these things in stock it would run a vendor about 500.00 bucks to upgrade a older machine.ThanksHope this helps
No, you will not get into trouble with the law for cutting the bills apart and spending the resultant $80. However, the set of 4 uncut $20 bills is almost certainly worth more than $80 to a collector, so you would be losing value if you did so.
The worth is a dollar...
The star next to the serial number on a US $100 bill (or any US bill, for that matter) means that it is a replacement bill. In the dollar bill production process, 32 bills are printed on a single sheet (4 bills by 8 bills). The sheets are stacked 100 high and then cut, resulting in 32 stacks of 100 bills each (with the last two digits in order from "00" through "99"). Each sheet is inspected, however, before being added to the stack to be cut - should an error be found, the sheet is destroyed and a sheet of "star bills" is inserted in its place (so as not to foul up the count).