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New Card Talk Member |
A&BC issued Land of the Giants cards in 1968 in the UK. It is a rare set to find. On the box and wrapper it has 3d? However, upon looking online I cannot find any 3-D cards in the set. Anyone know of an actual 3-D card with the British set issued in 1968? See an example of the card wrapper at http://bit.ly/2vyUJ6o and the box at http://bit.ly/2vxYaub | ||
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Member |
That's actually the price : 3d refers to "threepence", not an abbreviation for "three dimensional". It is roughly equivalent to 1/8 pound sterling. | |||
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Silver Card Talk Member |
Close, but it actually represented 1/80th of a pound. There were 240 old pence in one pound sterling | |||
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Gold Card Talk Member |
Those were the days . None of this decimalisation malarkey . | |||
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Titanium Card Talk Member |
I'm not laughing honest, well not now that i have stopped. It is an easy and understandable mistake to make for someone who does not live here. ____________________ Come, it is time for you to keep your appointment with The Wicker Man. | |||
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Diamond Card Talk Member |
Well we haven't adopted the metric system yet either, although they did try to teach it for awhile, it never took. | |||
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New Card Talk Member |
Thanks for the responses. I was thinking they intended to issue 3-D cards in the set but made a last minute change and had already printed the boxes and wrappers. | |||
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Gold Card Talk Member |
I just saw TERMINATOR 2 in 3D and it cost $7.50. Hope that makes everything even more confusing. | |||
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Silver Card Talk Member |
how about a full breakdown of our old coinage system ? 240p = 1 Pound 12p = 1 Shilling 2 Shillings = 1 Florin 2 Shillings and 6p = Half a Crown 5 Shillings = 1 Crown 20 Shillings = 1 Pound 21 Shillings = 1 Guinea I seem to remember the Guinea was introduced to make it easier for auction houses to to take their cut/fee...but I could be wrong And to Raven, we only partially adopted the decimal system here in the UK. While we do have decimal coinage, food and stuff has to be sold in grammes and kilogrammes and liquids are sold by the litre, we still measure speeds and distances in miles feet and inches, e.g. 70 mph speed limit on motorways. Quite a lot of things are still labeled up in both systems but fuel is sold by the litre. It was sold with both prices but the government quickly changed this so that price increases could be hidden. Increasing the price of a gallon of fuel by 5p used to cause an uproar but adding 'only' 1p a litre went completely unnoticed Of course, if you go into a pub to order drinks, you still get pints of beer. Somehow ordering 2/3rd of a litre just doesn't have the same ring to it | |||
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