Philips Financial Terminal Systems was a division of the Dutch electronics giant that produced cash-handling and point-of-sale equipment during the 1970s and 1980s. Test notes of this kind were manufactured for calibrating and demonstrating currency-processing machinery — sorters, validators, and automated teller systems — and were never intended to function as money in any sense.
The denomination "10" carries no monetary meaning. It exists purely as a machine-readable test value.
Philips Financial Terminal Systems was a division of the Dutch electronics giant that produced cash-handling and point-of-sale equipment during the 1970s and 1980s. Test notes of this kind were manufactured for calibrating and demonstrating currency-processing machinery — sorters, validators, and automated teller systems — and were never intended to function as money in any sense.
The denomination "10" carries no monetary meaning. It exists purely as a machine-readable test value.