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Contributing Member
1942 BSA- A little off topic
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The Following 17 Members Say Thank You to Brian B For This Useful Post:
bearrowland,
Bill Hollinger,
Brian Dick,
Bruce_in_Oz,
CODFan,
Frank LE,
gsimmons,
Hal O'Peridol,
oldpaul,
paul87buick,
Peter Laidler,
Ridolpho,
Roger Payne,
Simon P,
Steve H. in N.Y.,
USGI,
WarPig1976
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06-06-2014 11:50 AM
# ADS
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Legacy Member
Nice bike! Here's my brother and his 1942 BSA M-20.Attachment 53538
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Contributing Member
Thanks for sharing. I love the Sterling propped up against his bike!!
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Contributing Member

Originally Posted by
Brian B
Thanks for sharing. I love the Sterling propped up against his bike!!
Its a sten gun....
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Contributing Member

Originally Posted by
waco16
Its a sten gun....
My bad. It looked too long for a Sten in the picture!!
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It's a Lines Brothers Mk3 Sten.
That's a great bike to save Brian. Here's a bit of info for you. On the oil tank you'll see the letters OMD-330?. That indicates OIL, Mineral, Detergent and the viscosity rating. Can you tell me the markings on the workshop repair standard plate and I might be able to give you more info as it is all in a sort of simple code. In the few years before '52 the War Department as it was then were changing all of the old census numbere (like the C-52121 on Gary's picture) and replacing them with WD registration numbers such as 13YA28 (allocated from a central point at Ruislip in Middlesex incidentally) and the workshop repair plate might have this number stamped on it above or below the old original census number. My brothers old Bedford had L-xxxxx and that was changed to 77YC16 in 1952 at Bovingdon Base Workshop. The letters YH were used on the old Jeeps and YP on DUKW's and so on.
The union jack flag on the tank is/was a requirement of the fledgling W-German authorities (although they really didn't have toooo much authority.......) in 1956 for NATO vehicles to show the nationality of the vehicles so you know that it was still in service after 1956
There another few bits of useless Enfield info. Not strictly Enfield info of course - but sort of........, with the BSA connection!
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The Following 3 Members Say Thank You to Peter Laidler For This Useful Post:
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Yep, that's the WD registration number 07YE19. 4 Base Workshop was at Bad Oeynhausen in the BRitish sector of Germany
and was in an old German heavy plant and machinery factory.
There, that's a bit of your bike history.
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Contributing Member
Peter,
Thanks again for the excellent information. I am excited that the bike may be mostly original as it left military service. I image the black paint on the primary case and toolbox might have been a post war addition.
Thanks,
Brian
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Hey, Brian. Keep us all up to date with restoration progress on your little BSA. The real mystery is just HOW it came to be in the USA
! Obviously sold in the late 50's/early 60's at the huge vehicle disposals site at Hamm in W-Germany, probably by a dealer and sold on to a US serviceman.
When I first knew my wife, her dad had an old ex US lend lease British
Army INDIAN motorcycle in his garden shed. It was hand painted blue but under the blue paint you could clearly see the old WD census C- number and the trace of old 'tac' signs. That was obviously an old lend-lease bike too but generally speaking, disposal of lend lease stuff was tightly controlled, even well up to the 70's when we were still disposing of plant and machinery. CAT dozers (were they D8's as I recall from the big Engineers depot at Ripon?) were one of the last things to go. They all had post war SY and SZ numbers. There was an article in the Royal Engineers Corps Journal about the last of the old wartime kit being disposed of.
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