Yes, the redemption cards should be listed, but will probably take some research. Was each card printed up to represent each prize, or were all the cards the same, then the prize was stamped onto it, or were the cards identical and the prizes were awarded drawing-style?
As I understand it, the database does not include contest prizes that aren't proper trading cards. There was a contest in the 90's where the prizes were race-used spark plugs and lug nuts. Not slices embedded in a card, mind you, actual whole car parts. As I recall, those prizes were disallowed from inclusion in the database. If Tony Stewart's spoiler was inserted into a box of trading cards it could be listed. Exchanged for afterwards, no. Like it or not, that is a line in the sand that Admin has drawn.
A good example of a type of redemption set is the 1996 Score Board Autographed - Memorabilia Redemption cards. The set is listed with one card for each driver or car pictured on the front. The prizes that each individual card was redeemable for were stamped on the backs. The different prizes typed on the back do not count as variations and do not get separate entries in the database.
So depending on how the redemption cards were made, this may be an 11-card set or a 1-card set.
Ted Musgrave card collection 98.9% Complete: Cards Known: 1013, Cards Owned: 1002
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