Transportation coils

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The $1 Seaplane is the largest denomination of the Transportation Coil Series.  Note that the plate number on the middle stamp signifies that this a plate number coil.
The $1 Seaplane is the largest denomination of the Transportation Coil Series. Note that the plate number on the middle stamp signifies that this a plate number coil.

The Transportation Coils series is a set of definitive stamps issued by the United States Postal Service between 1981 and 1995. Officially dubbed the "Transportation Issue" or "Transportation Series", they have come to be called the "transportation coils" because all of the denominations were issued in coil stamp format.

The theme of the series was historical transportation vehicles used in the United States since its independence. The designs are spare, consisting only of the vehicle itself, and with inscriptions describing the general type ("Circus Wagon" or "Ferryboat") and a date, either a decade or sometimes a specific year. The stamps are primarily engraved, almost all in a single color on plain white paper (the $1 seaplane is in two colors). Some of the denominations also received special service inscriptions in black, such as "Bulk Rate" or "ZIP + 4 Presort". Many of those denominations were unusual fractional rates, such as 16.7 or 24.1 cents, used by bulk mailers and other businesses.

Because of their heavy use by businesses mailing to households, vast quantities of these were produced, and were a common sight in the daily mail of the 1980s and 1990s.

The series has become popular with stamp collectors, both because of the "classic" engraved designs, and because to the emergence of Plate number coil collecting. Many issues with specific plate numbers are hard to find and can be valuable.

Stamps of the series (ordered by denomination, not issue date):

School bus, 3.4 cents
School bus, 3.4 cents
Canoe, 5 cents, plate number 2
Canoe, 5 cents, plate number 2

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