I have a 1917 BSA MK III with serial number D83xxx. What does the "D" mean?Information
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I have a 1917 BSA MK III with serial number D83xxx. What does the "D" mean?Information
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Warning: This is a relatively older thread
This discussion is older than 360 days. Some information contained in it may no longer be current.
So in theory, there could be duplicate serial numbers. How about in reality? Has any one run across duplicate numbers? Just curious.
Thanks
Jon
It's much worse for Germanmilitary arms, for example Lugers. Their serial numbers comprise of four numeric digits plus a letter suffix AND the date. I have seen umpteen Lugers described by only those four digits and no suffix - I have NEVER seen the date used.
I have a pair of No8s that have the same serial number but they are both from the BSA contract of 2000 for NZso only shows that mistakes were made.
The NZcontract No8s had a DA prefix, mine are both DA156
I have posted them here before so you should be able to find them though my profile.
Nope....., or yes......, there WILL be duplicate serial NUMBERS but the actual REGISTERED number consists of the whole, including the prefix letter.
So on a BSA rifle you'll have M-30123 and you'll also have an N-30123. Same number - in fact 26 rifles will have that particular number but only one will have the registered number M-30123. Which is quite fortuitous because if not, there would be a lot of Quartermasters committing suicide!
If I got this right, 26 letters x ~100,000 numbers = ~2.6 million rifles with unique serial numbers. Did BSA exceed this production?
Roooooooob........ Come on now, I've just had my nuts chewed off for one apparently facetious reply! So now I'm on my best behaviour or I'll have my keyboard taken away........