Kedalf
Subdivision | 1 Kedalf = 100 Kedita |
Exchange Rate to USD | US$1.00 =~Ked$2.15 |
In use since | 1991 |
Currency Code | KED |
Symbol | Ked$ |
Characteristics of Kedalf print
Kedalfs are printed on a cotton-based paper, much like the US dollar. It mimicks the US dollar in many ways, except that real Kedalfs contain two threads of an undisclosed metal, an undisclosed distance from each edge. It has become common knowledge that, like the US dollar, it is actualy two peices of a cotton-based paper glued together using a special kind of glue, in incredibly small amounts. This glue is manipulated to show watermaks, such as hidden faces. By federal law, any time that a 1000 or 500 Kedalf bill is used, a valid ID must be shown, and the bill must be reported to the Treasury Department, or run through an approved scanner, to ensure that it is not counterfeited. These scanners may also be used on all types of bills.
Apperence
Unit (RPD) | Obverse | Reverse |
---|---|---|
Banknotes | ||
Ked$ 1 | Fmr. Chmn. Hon. Frank Sebuu | Zebu(Natl. animal) |
Ked$ 5 | Chmn. Roubert M. Kelsinger | Capitol Building |
Ked$ 10 | Juan Delon | Supreme Court Building |
Ked$ 20 | TBA | TBA |
Ked$ 50 | TBA | TBA |
Ked$ 100 | TBA | TBA |
Ked$ 500 | TBA | TBA |
Ked$ 1000 | TBA | TBA |
See Also
layout blatently plagerized from Pacitalia