PMG Grades Its First 70
PMG has graded nearly 300,000 notes and until
recently had yet to grade a 70, the highest
grade assigned. The $1 Series 1935G No Motto
Silver Certificate (Fr#1616) submitted by
Unlimited Currency of Greenville, Indiana, is
PMG’s first note graded 70 EPQ. What does it
take to grade a 70?
- Near perfect registration
- Fifty-fifty margins on front and back
- No handling
Because currency printing is a multi-step
process, it’s no wonder a 70 is a rare find. For
a note’s registration and margins to meet PMG’s
requirements for the 70 grade, each of the
following steps has to be coordinated with each
other in the very best possible way:
Step 1: The backs of the notes are printed
with green ink and allowed to dry for 24 to 48
hours.
Step 2: The faces are printed with black
ink and allowed to dry.
Step 3: A letterpress overprints the
Federal Reserve District seal and its
corresponding number designation with black
ink.
Step 4: The letterpress overprints the
Treasury seal and serial numbers in green ink.
Step 5: Two guillotine cutters slice the
notes into two note units (100 sheets at a
time) and finally into single stacks of 100
notes.
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Front of $1 1935G Silver Certificate Fr.1616
PMG 70EPQ |
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Back of $1 1935G Silver Certificate Fr.1616
PMG 70EPQ
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