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£5 Notes

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bluemoon1 | 16:54 Tue 12th Nov 2013 | ChatterBank
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There was a letter in the Daily Mail today re the HS2 rail route that said a billion £5 notes piled up would reach a staggering 63 miles high. Can anybody verify this fact, before I start repeating it to my mates in the pub.

Many thanks
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Banknote paper is around 0.11 mm thick. 1bn notes of 0.11 mm stacked would be around 110 km high ~ 68 miles. So somewhere around 60-70 miles is a reasonable estimate.
17:14 Tue 12th Nov 2013
What does it matter if it's correct or not ?

Stories told in a pub are usually tall ones , anyway :-)
whether it's true or not i'm not impressed
Hang on. I'll just nip downstairs with a tape measure.
Correct.
Are fivers a particular thickness ?

63 miles = 3991680"
/ 1,000,000,000 = about 4 thou. Could be true. How thick is a sheet of paper ? I'd suspect about that.
surely it couldn't be 63 miles exactly?
Banknote paper is around 0.11 mm thick.

1bn notes of 0.11 mm stacked would be around 110 km high ~ 68 miles.

So somewhere around 60-70 miles is a reasonable estimate.
i rest my case
^ a reasonable estimate of an unreasonable occurrence
4 thou looks about right, Old Geezer. That would make 500 of them about two inches thick, while a pack of 500 sheets of regular paper is about an inch and a half.
But as the stack got higher would the weight compress the notes below, thereby requiring more notes than estimated?
Another question is what would be the length of them if they were placed side by side?
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Thank you all for your replies, the comical and the genuine. I knew I'd get the answer here.
I agree doctordb but as it is a hyperthetical question I think we can ignore that fact

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