steve98052
Mongoose
Per canon, Imperial Credit notes are manufactured from plastic fibers of assorted colors, extruded under high pressure and pressure into 75×125 mm blocks, then sliced paper-thin (0.05 mm each) from the extrusion. Each is marked with a 14-character alphanumeric serial code and the name of the sector that issued it.
Reference: http://wiki.travellerrpg.com/Imperial_Currency
A block of plastic extruded from colored fibers, then sliced into paper-thin currency would have a front side that looks as designed, and a back side that was a mirror image of the front. That's not very appealing; on the reverse side the text would read backwards, any portraits would be mirrored, and so forth.
One possible solution that remains consistent with the canon description is that the plastic fibers are a magical substance that, when sliced, can have a different color on the front and back end. Such a substance may be possible with TL15 technology, but it seems like a hand-wave.
An additional problem with the extrusion method is that it isn't compatible with serial codes. Fibers that have different colors on opposite cut ends are complicated enough -- but how do you make fibers that change color 20 times per millimeter in a pattern that matches the sequence of serial codes?
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So what to do? One possibility is that the blocks of plastic are extruded in pairs, sliced to half the finished thickness, then bonded in pairs (with the serial codes bonded into spaces reserved for them). That's not canon, but it's something that one could plausibly deduce as what the canon description really meant.
Any thoughts?
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Why do I care?
The reason I ask is that I'm planning to make some prop money, and I'd like it to be as consistent with canon as I can make it, short of acquiring a TL15 Imperial Credit extrusion machine. If they come out nice enough, maybe I'll even sell them as game accessories, license approval permitting.
Reference: http://wiki.travellerrpg.com/Imperial_Currency
A block of plastic extruded from colored fibers, then sliced into paper-thin currency would have a front side that looks as designed, and a back side that was a mirror image of the front. That's not very appealing; on the reverse side the text would read backwards, any portraits would be mirrored, and so forth.
One possible solution that remains consistent with the canon description is that the plastic fibers are a magical substance that, when sliced, can have a different color on the front and back end. Such a substance may be possible with TL15 technology, but it seems like a hand-wave.
An additional problem with the extrusion method is that it isn't compatible with serial codes. Fibers that have different colors on opposite cut ends are complicated enough -- but how do you make fibers that change color 20 times per millimeter in a pattern that matches the sequence of serial codes?
---
So what to do? One possibility is that the blocks of plastic are extruded in pairs, sliced to half the finished thickness, then bonded in pairs (with the serial codes bonded into spaces reserved for them). That's not canon, but it's something that one could plausibly deduce as what the canon description really meant.
Any thoughts?
---
Why do I care?
The reason I ask is that I'm planning to make some prop money, and I'd like it to be as consistent with canon as I can make it, short of acquiring a TL15 Imperial Credit extrusion machine. If they come out nice enough, maybe I'll even sell them as game accessories, license approval permitting.