I looked at a US$ 5 and US$ 20 bill under UV light - images attached.
The $5 has no ID strip, but I did see a quasi-random UV image centered on Lincoln's image. Not sure if this is real or something that has transferred to the bill.
The $20 has the embedded security strip which glows green. However, three of the four corners also fluoresced - but the uneven pattern looks unintentional.

I looked at a US$ 5 and US$ 20 bill under UV light - images attached.
The $5 has no ID strip, but I did see a quasi-random UV image centered on Lincoln's image. Not sure if this is real or something that has transferred to the bill.
The $20 has the embedded security strip which glows green. However, three of the four corners also fluoresced - but the uneven pattern looks unintentional.
I suspect the glowing corners of the money are glowing for the same reason a crime scene glows.
I looked at a US$ 5 and US$ 20 bill under UV light - images attached.
The $5 has no ID strip, but I did see a quasi-random UV image centered on Lincoln's image. Not sure if this is real or something that has transferred to the bill.
The $20 has the embedded security strip which glows green. However, three of the four corners also fluoresced - but the uneven pattern looks unintentional.
I suspect the glowing corners of the money are glowing for the same reason a crime scene glows.
It seems that cocaine fluoresces green under UV light. This might imply that this bill has drug residue. I had 3 $20's in my wallet and only one had the corner fluorescence.

I don't understand why someone will willingly pay 3-5 times the retail price for a snack or some soda.
QuoteI don't understand why someone will willingly pay 3-5 times the retail price for a snack or some soda.
Usually because the vending machine is placed somewhere that your options are limited, ideally where you're more likely to want a drink or snack.
e.g in the gym foyer - you're hot, thirsty and possibly a little hungry after your work-out and the nearest shop is a mile away - what do you do? Walk to the shop or just stump up the inflated price for something from the machine?








@JackOfVA which model of dollars were you using, the ones I tested were from 2009, they tend to move the security strips and mix and match different patterns and UV reactive elements with each model
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Here are some images of how the dollars look under UV light.
My camera does not capture it very well, eg it does not capture some of the variations in the fibers and how they react to the UV light
but each value reacts differently to the light
Here are some examples:
$5
$20 ($20 has the security strip in a different location, and makes use of a few different fiber types which all react differently to the UV light, causing a a few different subtly different shades of of the color of the bill to appear. (couldn't get the camera to capture them) (the $20 also uses reflective ink with some glitter in parts of the image, but under UV light, they are completely non reactive and lose their glitter effect)
$1
The $1 has a very uniform response to the UV light (they most likely use cheaper paper and ink)
For the bills where verifying the authenticity is important, they use many different fibers and inks which react to different forms of light in specific ways. the formulas are also likely kept secret, thus making it pretty much impossible for someone to make a fake one and have it pass every test.
The down side is that it is also easy to fail the test when it comes to machines. Due to the paper and ink used, they are not the most resilient and thus after a while, they will become useless in higher end machines, for example a dollar that is beginning to fade may not pass the test that the ATM machines that accept cash deposits may do, but will work just fine in a vending machine.
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A side note, never buy anything from a vending machine. I don't understand why someone will willingly pay 3-5 times the retail price for a snack or some soda.
A large case of soda quantities over 100, generally comes out to around 13-14 cents a bottle (16oz or around 473ml) if you get them wholesale, most stores will then charge $1 per 16oz bottle which is already an insane price especially since a 2 liter (2000ml) bottle is also $1. Then you will have vending machines that will charge in many cases, as much as $2.50 for the soda, and you still see people buying stuff from them.
The vending machines at the college I go to, generally have a long line at the vending machines. (I thought you had to have an IQ above 5 to get into college, but apparently they now allow people to push the limits of negative numbers in terms of IQ )
940 | Infrared | 1.5 |
880 | Infrared | 1.7 |
635 | High Eff. Red | 2.0 |
605 | Orange | 2.2 |
585 | Yellow | 2.4 |
555 | Green | 2.6 |
450 | Blue | 3.0/3.5 |
360-405 | Ultraviolet | 3.5 |
I looked at a US$ 5 and US$ 20 bill under UV light - images attached.
The $5 has no ID strip, but I did see a quasi-random UV image centered on Lincoln's image. Not sure if this is real or something that has transferred to the bill.
The $20 has the embedded security strip which glows green. However, three of the four corners also fluoresced - but the uneven pattern looks unintentional.
I suspect the glowing corners of the money are glowing for the same reason a crime scene glows.
It seems that cocaine fluoresces green under UV light. This might imply that this bill has drug residue. I had 3 $20's in my wallet and only one had the corner fluorescence.
I guess only one had been inserted into a dancer's bill validator?
The best way to check the wavelenght of your LED is to use your multimeter in the "check diode" position and to measure the forward voltage drop. It should be about:
Wavelenght (nm) / color / Vf
940 Infrared 1.5
880 Infrared 1.7
635 High Eff. Red 2.0
605 Orange 2.2
585 Yellow 2.4
555 Green 2.6
450 Blue 3.0/3.5
360-405 Ultraviolet 3.5
If you really want to get the WTF face, try spending a $2 bill... Fifty cent coins are good too. At least the $1 coins were pushed somewhat recently
I've got a $200 Australian coin, try spending that!
Where does this come from? Does not match my experimental data - see images below.
Also, the 45 degree sensor is reading the surface of the bill compared to reading through the bill for the outside sensors. I'm sure that was assumed, but I didn't hear it on the video.
It seems unlikely to me that the note acceptor is using UV. Those photodiodes aren't going to detect UV at all -- the glass lenses will block it quite effectively.
Also most UV LEDs I've seen are clear; the smoked plastic is generally reserved for infrared LEDs.
It seems unlikely to me that the note acceptor is using UV. Those photodiodes aren't going to detect UV at all -- the glass lenses will block it quite effectively.That's only the case for shortwave UV.
It may be looking for fluorescence, so the detectors don't need to be UV sensitive (UV detectors are typically exotic and expensive, usually made bu Hamamatsu)QuoteAlso most UV LEDs I've seen are clear; the smoked plastic is generally reserved for infrared LEDs.Agreed. A quick test for UV is some fluorescent material, e.g. a highlighter pen.
I doubt a video camera would have significant sensitivity at wavelengths below visible violet
It may be looking for fluorescence, so the detectors don't need to be UV sensitive (UV detectors are typically exotic and expensive, usually made bu Hamamatsu)
I guess it must be enabled from the vending machine controller. When the machine is not working the acceptor should not accept notes.That's exactly what's going on. this makes sure your money doesn't get swallowed up by a machine that's empty or malfunctioning in some way or another. Otherwise these things are dead reliable electrically. Their biggest issues as dave noted is that the mechanicals and optics get absolutely filthy. After you push maybe a thousand bills through it you need to just open the thing up clean off the feed belts and sensors and you're "money"
as an aside, these things aren't really about detecting counterfeits, there's really very little of that going on, but rather to make sure the bill is the right denomination.