Ellis Briggs Serial Numbers

Ellis Briggs Serial Numbers Average ratng: 8,4/10 7913votes
Ellis Briggs Serial NumbersEllis Briggs Serial Numbers

Hi All, I'm trying to unravel the mystery maker of a frame that I have recently aquired. Although the decals are Ellis Briggs a very nice chap at the EB informed me that as the frame number has no four digit serial number on the bb it was'nt actually an EB built frame. It was more likely to be a respray by them (probably early 1950) where the original decals could not be obtained so they added their own. The Serial is the 5 digit number vertically stamped on the lower head lug: 702 45 (the last two digits are at a different angle to the first three so my thought is that they could be a suffix 1945 perhaps?) on the bb there is a raised casting mark possibly D83 or BS3 (bsa? Ibm System P5 Serial Connection Baud. ) and a stamped number 5 The lugs are nothing fancy and look to me as though they might be 1940s rather than 50s but cannot find and Marque that stamped serials in this location. No forks with the frame just an early Bramton headset and roadster forks that were completely wrong.

Any help or hints would be really appreciated as this one is baking my noodle Many thanks Sam Stevens London, UK[/u][url][/url] Attachments: P130511_12.57_[02].jpg [ 438.83 KiB Viewed 995 times ] P130511_12.57.jpg [ 441.29 KiB Viewed 995 times ] P130511_13.00_[01].jpg [ 354.91 KiB Viewed 995 times ] P130511_13.13.jpg [ 442.56 KiB Viewed 995 times ]. Hi, Thanks for the help so far. I was giving up hope on it being an EB and of ever finding info on it. Thanks desmondo for the pic.

A lovely bike. Found the other pics on flickr which will help no one i matching a set of forks. Any chance of a picture of the serial so that I can make an A>B with mine? Would be grateful. Keith: Realise now I could have been a bit more thorough in my description so here is a bit more on the frame.

Hi All, I'm trying to unravel the mystery maker of a frame that I have recently aquired. Although the decals are Ellis Briggs a very nice chap at the EB informed me that as the frame number has no four digit serial number on the bb it was'nt actually an EB built frame. It was more likely to be a respray by them. Port numbers are assigned in various ways, based on three ranges: System Ports (0-1023), User Ports (1024-49151), and the Dynamic and/or Private Ports.

There is indeed a chain hanger about 3 1/2 inches up the rear seat stay. Also the cable guide on the bb is a double, a small brass wheel with two cable grooves. Install Internet Explorer 10 Wine.

Other side of the bb has a grease hole with screw cap distance from rear s-stay bridge to end of s-stay is 14' Drop out width is 120mm The hangers look as they dont match as mudguard stay locator is in a different place on each. There is also a v. Small threaded hole drilled into the bottom of the chain side hanger (would love to know what this is for?). Bb is standard size. Cable eyes and pump pegs on top tube. Also a cable eye on chain stay.

If this is a prewar/40s frame I would guess as you say that the brazed fittings such as the cable guides and chain hanger would have been brazed on at the same time as the early 1950s EB respray. Weight is 2.5 kg or roughly 5 lbs All pics here: cheers guys.

Is a British programme produced by the. As of 1 July 2017, 839 episodes of Doctor Who have aired, concluding the tenth series. This includes one television movie and multiple specials, and encompasses 275 stories over 36 seasons. Additionally, four charity specials and two animated serials have also been aired.

The programme's high episode count has resulted in Doctor Who holding the for the highest number of episodes of a science-fiction programme. In June 2017, it was announced that due to the terms of a deal between and in, the company has first right of refusal on the purchase for the Chinese market of future series of the programme until and including Series 15. Doctor Who ceased airing in 1989 and. Each story in the original series (1963–1989) is a multi-episode serial, with two exceptions: the 1965 episode ', and the 20th anniversary story.

During the early seasons of the programme, and occasionally through its run, most serials were linked together; usually one story would lead directly into the next. Starting with the 2005 revival, the production team abandoned the traditional serial format for a largely self-contained episodic format with occasional multi-part stories and loose story arcs. Due to the BBC's 1970s policy, 97 episodes from the 1960s are, with the result that 26 serials are incomplete, although all of these still exist as audio recordings, and some have been reconstructed. In the first two seasons and most of the third, each episode of a serial had an individual title; no serial had an overall on-screen title until. The serial titles given below are the most common title for the serials as a whole, used in sources such as the Doctor Who Reference Guide and the BBC's classic episode guide, and are generally those used for commercial release. The practice of individually titled episodes resurfaced with the show's 2005 revival, when Doctor Who 's serial nature was abandoned in favour of an episodic format. The story numbers are not official designations but are merely to serve as a guide to where the story stands in the overall context of the programme.