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(25 Sep 2013) A glitzier, high-tech version of America's 100 dollar bill, a currency note that often conjures images of financial status, is rolling off the presses and will be headed for wallets soon. Despite years of production-related delays, the updated 100 US dollar bill has undergone a major makeover that includes a colour-changing ink well, 3-D security ribbon, and more texture on Benjamin Franklin's collar. The new, more expensive C-note is scheduled to enter circulation on Oct. 8 and also has a higher calling: It aims to fight back against counterfeiters by using better printers and technology. The modifications will help people check for fake banknotes without going to a bank or using a blacklight, said Michael Lambert, a deputy associate director at the Federal Reserve. "The 3D security ribbon is actually I think a very cool and interesting feature, because it actually draws the public's interest to the banknote so that they can be looking more carefully to protect themselves from any potential counterfeiting." The new bill still bears the image of Franklin, one of America's Founding Fathers. But it adds part of the Declaration of Independence, written in script from Franklin's left shoulder to the right edge of the bill. A quill and an ink well are printed behind the text, and a blue ribbon goes down near the centre of the bill. The ink in the well changes colours from copper to green when the bill is turned. "You'll see the bell switching from copper to green so it gives the illusion that the bell is disappearing within the inkwell," said Lambert. A watermark of Franklin also appears on the right side of the bill when it's held up to light. The Federal Reserve said in its latest currency budget that it would order 2.5 (b) billion new 100 dollar bills this year. Lambert estimated each new bill costs about 4 cents more to print than the old one, totalling an additional 100 (m) million US dollars in costs this year. The Fed also budgeted about 9.5 (m) million US dollars this year for its education programme, which includes global outreach efforts about the new note. The government has redesigned the 5, 10, 20 and 50 dollar bills during the last decade to add security features. The 1 dollar remains the only bill not to get a makeover. At a federal facility in Fort Worth, 32-bill sheets of money paper are printed, stamped with serial numbers and sliced into individual notes. The notes are sorted into piles 100 deep, banded together and eventually stacked into 4,000-note bricks worth 400-thousand US dollars. Those bricks will be shipped to Federal Reserve banks across the United States for distribution. A multi-step printing process leaves the bills with their distinctive colours and texture. The process takes place under tight security inside a secluded facility several miles north of downtown Fort Worth. Several checkpoints stand between the facility's gated entrance and the printing floor, where dozens of overhead security cameras watch the process. Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork Twitter: / ap_archive Facebook: / aparchives Instagram: / apnews You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/you...