Test money

Test money (or test notes, test bills, funny money, Monopoly money) are a part of the test apparatus that are often used with currency handling equipment, such as automatic teller machines.

While it is often desirable to use actual banknotes or coins in the process of testing currency handling equipment, the inherent value of the objects being used means that security procedures must be put in place during the testing period that they are used. If the testing includes destructive testing, where the currency is purposefully damaged or destroyed to see how the machinery will react, further concern will be raised about the subsequent loss in value of the objects. To remove these concerns, test money is often used in place of real currency.

Test money may share some or all of the characteristics of a given currency (size, paper type, paper thickness, colouring, printing characteristics, various denominations), but it also has some form of easily identifiable, non-removable, non-mutable characteristics that differentiate it from legal tender, scrip, or counterfeit currency.

For certain types of bulk cash handling equipment, the test money units may represent bundled or rolled currency.

Some members of the notaphiliatelic community collect test money.[1]

Use in television and movies

Test money is often used in television and movie production in the same fashion.[2][3][4]

References

  1. – ATMMarketplace.com : A news story about a test money collector
  2. – ICWales – News report of fake money used in Doctor Who
  3. – Example of test money used in Doctor Who
  4. – Another example of test money used in Doctor Who

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/6/2013. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.