Eksman
Active member
If anyone can get ahold of any fake money give me a shout
Yeah, hard that on R2 a min ago. I remember when I worked in loss prevention/stock control in town and a guy came in with a fake £20 to pay for something. He claimed he was given it as change at the burger stand outside Churchill square. He went rather red when I pointed out that to get a £20 note as change for a £1,50 burger he would have had to try to pay for it with a £50, which is highly unlikely.
I believe the Germans tried something similar in WW2?
If anyone can get ahold of any fake money give me a shout
Surely it's easy. You just take your £19 million down the pier or to an amusement arcade and put each coin through the change machine, exchanging them for legitimate 20p and 10p coins.
Surely it's easy. You just take your £19 million down the pier or to an amusement arcade and put each coin through the change machine, exchanging them for legitimate 20p and 10p coins.
Bit suspicious walking out with 95,000,000 20p pieces though
It's all lovely and shiney and that..........but presumably it will be a different weight and will have a different metallic content to the existing £1 coin. And of course, it's a totally different shape.
But I've not heard what the cost will be to businesses large and small to have to modernise their machinery etc to accept the new coin. Parking meters, gaming machines, railway ticket machines, self-service checkouts, vending machines....the list goes on.
But then it's nice and shiney........ so heaping more costs on businesses when so many of them are already struggling to survive doesn't really matter!
It's all lovely and shiney and that..........but presumably it will be a different weight and will have a different metallic content to the existing £1 coin. And of course, it's a totally different shape.
But I've not heard what the cost will be to businesses large and small to have to modernise their machinery etc to accept the new coin. Parking meters, gaming machines, railway ticket machines, self-service checkouts, vending machines....the list goes on.
But then it's nice and shiney........ so heaping more costs on businesses when so many of them are already struggling to survive doesn't really matter!
Just heard on the wireless that a chap has been caught with 19 million pieces of metal destined to be turned into fake £1 coins. Got me thinking. How on earth would you go about getting those into circulation? I know people probably buy loads of them on the black market, but how do they then circulate them? That is a hell of a lot of anything to get rid of. You can't just walk into a bank with loads of them and you'd be hard pushed to claim a win on the fruity with enough of them to make it worth your while. Obviously there's a way to do it but I'm baffled.