Canada -   

1
The new bills are expected to reduce counterfeiting and are more environmentally-friendly. A Brandon man said he tested out the strength of the new Canadian $100 bills and found they ripped more easily than paper bills. The new bills are expected to reduce counterfeiting and are more environmentally-friendly.

Manitoba man's rip-test exposes flaw in new $100 bill

Viewer

CTV News Video

CTV Winnipeg: Testing durability of $100 dollar bills
Canada's new $100 bills are supposed to be stronger and last longer than previous bills. A Brandon man said the plastic bills tear more easily than older paper ones. Josh Crabb has more.

A A |  Email ThisEmail  | PrintComments (23) Facebook   

The new bills are expected to reduce counterfeiting and are more environmentally-friendly. A Brandon man said he tested out the strength of the new Canadian $100 bills and found they ripped more easily than paper bills. The new bills are expected to reduce counterfeiting and are more environmentally-friendly.

Photos

The new bills are expected to reduce counterfeiting and are more environmentally-friendly.

View Larger Image

Date: Thu. Jan. 19 2012 7:58 AM ET

A Manitoba man has found cracks in the claim Canada's new polymer bills are stronger than the paper variety they're replacing.

Brandon resident Charles Shepard says a test he devised at home found the old, paper bills were able to take three times as much weight before tearing in half.

He first noticed the weakness on Tuesday when he withdrew 12 of the plastic $100 bills from a local bank. The bills, which first went into circulation in November, are supposed to last two-and-a-half times as long as their paper counterparts, according to the Bank of Canada.

Shepard said two of the bills he received already had nicks in them and began tearing even more when he handled them.

"This one had a crack or something where it was folded," he explained, showing CTV Winnipeg the bill in question. "When I counted the money, it seemed to just tear instantly."

In the test he devised, he placed a full can of Coke on top of one of the cracked bills and pulled on it. The bill tore easily in half.

"It probably would've torn with less than one can of Coke," he added.

Trying the same test with a cracked paper $50 bill and a piece of 2-ply toilet paper, Shepard found both could withstand the weight of three full pop cans without ripping. After seeing the results, he says he'd prefer to stick with the old bills when possible.

"I think I'd rather have two fifties, the older paper bills," he said. "I don't think the Canadian $100 bill should be weaker than two-ply toilet paper."

The Bank of Canada says it's aware of the issue, but it's not a major concern.

"One of the elements of the polymer compound upon which the bills are printed will basically cause the bills to tear if there's a nick of any of the four sides of the bill," said regional Bank of Canada representative Ted Mieszkalski. "The bills themselves can be cut but not torn."

He says the plastic bills are still much more durable than the paper ones, a claim supported by banks and retailers questioned by CTV News.

"When you get several of them they're slippery so they're a little bit harder to count, but other than that they're great," says Tracy Jonasson of Brandon Home Hardware.

The Bank of Canada says anyone with a ripped new bill can exchange it for a new one at any financial institution.

With a report by CTV Winnipeg's Josh Crabb

Comments are now closed for this story

peter in mb
said

This is just another example where the rule of (if it ant broke do fix it) was not obeyed by the Panasonic geniuses who came up with the idea of polymer bills.


Wheat
said

First world problems.


Don K
said

Here's an idea; why not just use the bills to PAY for things instead of trying to destroy them? I can't recall the last time I tried to pay with a $100 bill while balancing a can of coke or pepsi on it. You can get almost anything to break if you try hard enough so why not just use the bills as they were intended to be used?


Devil's Advocate
said

The problems start when you fold them. Plastic ( like metal) doesn't like to be folded and will fatigue (weaken at the fold point) very rapidly. these bills will last nowhere near as long as their cotton woven counterparts.


Evan in Athabasca
said

Did anybody know that a crisp $100 bill has the hint of Maple?


Ripper
said

Is this the same guy who "discovered" that the centres of the twoonies could just "pop out" if you dropped them?


Bob in Chatham
said

A note to the Artful Codger: Ask the public ? Heaven forbid that any politician listen to the public, unless of course it is near election time.


David J
said

I hope the Mint takes notice of this test. Certainly Canadians from coast to coast to coast will need strong paper money to lift their beverage cans.


corey
said

who holds cans of coke with money anyway if u have enough money to use it for shelving you should give it to charity get a life!


Adrian from Hamilton
said

In the olden days I have seen bills that are worn and soiled that are still in one piece. More recently I have seen too many fairly new paper bills with tears along the fold line. Maybe the solution to this is to make half size bills so there is no need to fold them. (I leave my $20s flat, fold my $10 and put them to one side of my wallet, fold my $5 and put them in the other side of my wallet.)


The Irony
said

The correlation between the symbolism of our monetary representation (100 dollar bill) and the representation of what toilet paper is used for is very ironic. The bottom line..., toilet paper is stronger, durable, more valuable, and handles more crap than the new 100 dollar bill.


The Artful Codger
said

Well that little test got the gentleman his 15 minutes. I had read where someone had done a heat test and it showed the bills shrivelled under heat. The local newspaper picked it up as part of an editorial "exposing " the flaw. What it suggests is that before the remaining bills are issued they create a citizen panel to test the new bills because apparently the scientific testing does not pass muster.


jack
said

Wouldn't it be nice if the only problem you had in life is finding out that your hundred dollar bills tear up too easily?


Prof. Pye Chartt
said

Following a read of this story, this morning I wiped my behind with one of the new $100 bills, and found that it was inferior to the old paper $100 bills. Not impressed. Clearly, if we had a reliable Conservative government, and Harper & Company really cared about insanely wealthy folks such as myself, the bathroom performance of the new polymer $100 bills wouldn't represent the serious issue that it does.


Robert B
said

I tested one of those 100 bills, and yes the store took it when I bought a new winter coat!!!!!!! Hmmmmm. Darn, it disapears just like the old ones!!!!


joe canada
said

I can't remember the last time I even had $100 bill in my wallet. Sigh....


Salt and Vinegar
said

Do they burn? Can you light a cigar off one?


DS
said

Well, this is some news. We all await this gentleman's reports of the "fire test," the "shredder test" and the "put it on the BBQ grill test" to see how this new stuff pans out. Seems like someone always wants to be the first to report this kind of thing. Reminds me of the cretin that had to hammer the centres out of the toonies yea several years back....the rum & coke mix is a great suggestion.


Yer nieghbor next door in ONT
said

Must be a cold boring winter in Manitoba. With that nicked $100 bill he should buy some Rum, mix it with that can of Coke and relax. Try not to swet the small stuff my friend.


island girl
said

I don't understand...'they can been torn if they have a nick on any of the four sides'.....but 'they can be cut but not torn' So do they tear or not? I find once someone folds them, they're toast. They won't unfold and they won't stay flat in a cash register. Don't fold them, people!


Sherry
said

Awesome testing dude ... you rock!


Daveyboy
said

Most people don't tear there money in half, they fold it away when not in use, then hand it to another when a transaction takes place. Simple no tearing, yanking or pulling involved.


Intelligent Liberal
said

That is a very interesting test devised by this man. I CHANGED the test and tried several bills myself with varying results. A can of pepsi on top of a bill tore it, as did a can of Guiness, however when placing a Labatt Lite on the bill, it was more difficult to rip it. I shall try many other deviations, but now I will have to wait until next pay day.(suddenly broke)


Share with your social Network:

Facebook DIGG Newsvine Delicious Twitter StumbeUpon Reddit Yahoo! Buzz

 

Advertisement

Contest

Today's Canada Stories

Anne-Catherine Powers, Shakti Ramsurrun, Gatineau, Quebec

Estranged husband charged in Gatineau, Que., murders

More  2 Video(s) 2

Most Talked about Stories

I feel that if certain organs were in demand, less effort would be made to revive people. Am I being silly? Not really. I had a bad experience in hospital when my heart stopped, the doctors tried to revive me and failed. They stopped and said I was gone. I came around on my own when the nurse was giving a final BP reading of 'zero'. I heard her declare me dead! It was all I could do to shake my head but they never caught on til I was able to open my eyes. You should have seen them scramble then! I thought the nurse was going to faint. The thing is, I think we may write people off too soon when there is something of value to be gained from them.

me

Should all Canadians be automatically considered organ donors?