Originally posted by cpxxx
No, I don't know what L S D means.
LSD was an abbreviation for Pounds, shillings and pence. Old Pence (pre-1971) were written with the letter d after them, eg 7d = 7 old pence. In swoop's list above, he has used p instead of d, but p is for new pence - 1971 onwards.
banana asks about s
chillings. The schilling is actually the old unit of currency in Austria and, coincidentally was worth about 5p or one old English shilling, which was 12d.
Swoop, I don't recall any tuppence piece in the old currency. The smallest coins were the 3d piece (a twelve sided job), the 1d - penny - and the ha'penny - ½d. The farthing (¼d) predates me by a few years. The groat (4d) predated me by some 150 years...
cpxxx - were you around when all coinage was resized? That was effectively another currency change. All the coins were made slimmer, smaller - so that we wouldn't all get hernias carrying them around.
The 20p piece makes a good tyre tread depth gauge. The inner part of the coin which depicts the Queen's head is slightly recessed by a raised surround. The recessed area starts
exactly 3mm from the edge of the coin. Stick a 20p into your tyre treads, and if the raised surround does not completely disappear, your tread is less than 3mm - time to think about replacing the tyre before long. (legal limit 1.6mm)