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Old December 28th 11, 11:13 AM posted to nyc.transit,uk.transport.london
[email protected] hounslow3@yahoo.co.uk is offline
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On 28/12/2011 05:34, Peter T. Daniels wrote:
On Dec 27, 7:51 pm,
wrote:
On 27/12/2011 23:52, Peter T. Daniels wrote:





On Dec 27, 6:21 pm, Miles wrote:
Neil writes:
SEPTA, unlike NYC, accepts dollar bills on its buses. I don't know
why NYC's fareboxes aren't set up to handle that.


The US could really, really do with $1, $2 and $5 coins for this sort
of purpose. I genuinely do not understand why people are so
resistant.


"If dollar bills were good enough for Jesus, they're good enough for me!"


It must mean something that the $1 bill was not redesigned with the
giant portrait when all(? I haven't seen a $2 bill since my 1993 visit
to Monticello -- where the admission fee was $8 so that they could
return Jeffersons in change) the other bills in circulation ($5, $10,
$20, $50, $100) were.


p.s. By random luck, I got a ¥100 paper note in a store a while back:
a customer was trying to use it, and the store wouldn't take it
(though they're technically still legal tender), so I bought off her
for a ¥100 coin... :]


I did that with a $2 bill once in eastern Ohio at a gas station
convenience store.


I think that two-dollar bills would be easy enough to come by as they
are in general circulation. Just go to a bank and ask for a few.-


Have you ever seen one?

Yes. I have a couple of them, as a matter of fact.

Have you ever seen a cash register till with a slot for them?


Nope.

Has the store cashier ever seen one?


Unlikely. I wouldn't be surprised of a couple of them even try to ring
the police on grounds that the customer is trying to pass false currency

I'm going to the bank tomorrow -- I'll try to remember to ask if they
have any on hand.


They should do. Or they might ask you to come back in a couple of days.