This sort of thing interests me greatly: a situation where some notes have UV and some don't. So I had a little look…
I got 22 UNC notes and tested them under UVA (365nm) and UVC (254nm). Here's what I found:
Most of the notes have UV activity on the reverse, but in many cases this activity is not obvious under UVA (365nm). When you switch to UVC (254nm), the UV activity is then more obvious. In this case I mean UV activity where it is in the design, or ink. Not the UV fibres.
Most of the notes have green and red UV fibres in the paper, with the green fibres being more numerous usually.
Two of my notes have no UV fibres at all, and one note has a single red fibre visible on the obverse only.
One note out of the 22 shows no UV activity at all, not under 365nm or 254nm. However if you look at the note on the reverse, the ink in the region where you expect fluorescence is a different colour so it may well be that this note was intended to fluoresce but now it doesn't for some reason.
So in general I would summarize it like this:
1) These notes all fluoresce under UV, but it may require a UVC lamp to notice it
2) Some paper sheets had such sparse UV fibre distribution that a particular note may have no UV fibres at all
I need to get more notes to work out whether there is a correlation between these findings and certain batches of notes.
If you have any of these notes with different prefixes, I would appreciate it if you post here what you have found, with UVA vs UVC and with the UV fibres.
Note when counting fibres, it is sometimes the case where the same fibre is counted on both sides of the note. That is fine, it is not supposed to be super accurate, just an indication of whether the greens or reds were sparse on the obverse or reverse.














