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Old 04-11-2024, 05:22 PM
deweyinthehall deweyinthehall is offline
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In 1980, some Topps wax packs contained Hit to Win game cards - based upon the availability of wrappers bearing the Hit to Win ad versus the common "15 cards" statement, I think it's safe to say that less than half of the 1980 wax packs contained game cards - quite possibly a lot less.

Card backs indicate a total of 8875 prizes and that there were 2 prizes per 1000 cards.

Check my math, but this means that there was 1 prize per 500 game cards, and so there had to have been 4,437,500 game cards - right?

If so, let's assume that perhaps 4.4 million were pack inserted - no purchase was necessary, so some would have been held back for people who mailed in for one. This equates to 4.4 million packs, or 66 million cards.

With 726 cards, this comes out to roughly 90,909 of each card.

Because less than half the packs contained game cards lets double that and add some to come out with 250,000 of each card in wax packs.

Does this sound about right? Adding cards for cello, super cello, vending, rack, K-Mart and Squirt packaging, what might this mean for a total?

Do we have any idea if there was a standard ratio of how many wax packs were produced for each rack or cello?
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