Heard on the news a couple of weeks ago that we were getting a new £5 note but nothing since well dd said yesterday that the new note starts comes into circulation on the 13th of September
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I have been noticing that I get quite a few £5.00 notes when using the cash machines,I got 4 yesterday in a total of £100.00 withdrawal and the rest all 10s,I don't mind them at all and I would certainly be grateful if someone gave me a bag full of dirty ones free of chargeKeep Calm,You're Fabulous
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Gem - they should have asked you first!
I hope the new ones will stay cleaner - I think they are supposed to last longer being made of polymer. I suppose all notes will become the same eventually. I wonder if we'll be able to wash them if you get dirty ones!"Joy is what happens to us when we allow ourselves to recognise how good things really are. "
(Marianne Williamson)
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Originally posted by granma2aj View PostThe Halifax web site has information on the £5s hope you're not thinking of money laundering lol
At least if they get left in pockets and go through the washing machine you won't find yourself trying to piece them together and take them to the bank, red-faced! I wonder if they will survive being chewed by a puppy!
Don't tell Oma you can wash them, though - she might want to iron them as well. (Sorry, Oma, couldn't resist!)"Joy is what happens to us when we allow ourselves to recognise how good things really are. "
(Marianne Williamson)
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They were just being shown on BBC News and they look quite tough. They have a transparent bit which apparently will make them more difficult to forge. Cash machines will have to be adapted to take them so I doubt they will be available through machines for a while.If you want to go fast go alone, if you want to go far go together
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They stick together
They can – meaning shoppers could possibly hand over two at once. In its official Q&A on the notes, the Bank admits that “brand new polymer notes can sometimes stick together, but this effect is short-lived once in use”. Oddly, the notes are not just sticky, but also slippery compared with existing notes, which are made of cotton-based paper. The Bank says they “can feel slippery when new, although this tends to decline over time once the notes are in circulation”. It adds that polymer notes (it prefers not to use the word “plastic”) will have areas of raised print that will give them a “tactile quality”.
Sometimes I forget to like posts,but that doesn't mean I don't like them.
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