- Haro Bmx Serial Number Lookup
- Patterson Bmx Serial Numbers Chart
- Patterson Bmx Serial Numbers Generator
- Patterson Bmx Serial Numbers List
- Patterson Bmx Serial Numbers 22
- Patterson Bmx Serial Numbers Lookup
Vance Patterson the Father of Brent & Brian.they were unstoppable forces in bmx. Richie Anderson was the winningest ametuer rider ever. This family run business made some great bikes. Instead of breaking it up (in the drop down) 78-80, 81-83 & 83-85, maybe it should be 78-82 & 83-85. Patterson Bmx Serial Numbers. Metumoner1988 2020. Are all bikes manufactured in the eighties?2. How many welders are there? Is the welder always. Racing bmx bike frame& fork#2525 mongoose era i am very excited to offer up for auction this week, a rare vintage 1980's cook bros. Racing chrome bmx bike frame with forks. Laid-back seat pole and tange motocross head set. The serial number on this bike is located on back drop, and the serial number is#2525. Yes, this is an early 4 digit serial.
Are all bikes manufactured in the eighties?2. How many welders are there? Is the welder always identified by a single letter?1. We think all bikes are manufactured in the eighties - you would not believe how hard it was to crack this code - the bikes made in the seventies have totally different serials - which still haven't been deciphered yet2. From what we can tell there were 3 welders all identified by a single letter - their first initial(there are also prefixes for special edition bikes but they are quite rare and can be dealt with on a case to case basis ie T for team rider bike). What I'm not clear about is what they did in October, November or December, as there appears to be only a single digit for the month.HTHBrianThat is what confused us for some time!Following the sequence, purely for illustrations sake, the last December 1981 frame, build sequence 256 welded by Mark Bradshaw bike would be stamped121256Mthen a January 1982 welded by Darrell would be12257DWhen we only had a few frames as reference you could understand our difficulty in establishing their heritageCheersBen.
I am afraid I don't follow this fully. If there are two 'versions' of the frame number and each needs to be interpreted differently, then the version should be entered into another field (assuming it's not apparent from the frame number alone).Now I would suggest you sit down with a piece of paper and write down the steps you would take to identify the month and the year without a computer (think of this as writing directions for a stupid but reliable person).
Then the actual calculation will become easy to construct - assuming the task is possible in the first place. Hi Ben, and Welcome to the Forum,I've been toying with your sample data in TextWrangler, and I think it might be possible to do the lion's share of this parsing out using grep patterns in TextWrangler or BBEdit.The real challenge is the Oct - Jan productions, however, I was able to parse out the Dec and Jan example you gave, using a couple of greps. However, the real test would be with real data.Are you trying to breakout this data on bikes you own, bikes you want to purchase, or are you doing this for all of the bikes manufactured by these two?Do you have a complete list of those you want to parse out?If so, why not post it as an attachment to a Reply, so that I can get a better feel for the complete picture?HTHLee Edited September 20, 2010 by Guest.
Patterson Bmx For Sale
Hi Lee and thanks others for your repliesWhat we are trying to create is a couple of things in one for the enthusiasts of this particular Australian made brand.Firstly a decoder of the number stamped on the framesSecondly an historical archive of the frames themselves including some other aspects such as paint finishes and the likeHere's the breakdown as we established it, in a little greater detailFor the frame stamped 501161D as an example5= May some serials began with 10, 11, or 12 for October, November or December. Eg 110xxxx X0= 1980 they used the last digit of the year & will always be 9,0,1,2,or 3.1161= the serial number of the frame. This can be as short as one digit, ie, 911 for Sept, 1981, frame number 1.D= Darrell Kendell, the man who actually built the frame in the factory.Other code letters used as a suffix areM= Mark Bradley who was a frame welder, a designer, test rider & Factory Team rider.R= Ray Williams. He is currently the state Liberal member for Hawksbury.X= Not currently known but thought to have been used on Factory Team race bikes.Prefix codes were sometimes included and can also be used as qualifiersTF= Team Frame. This was used on the 'Team' models, which was their production race model from December 1979 to August 1981TH= Team Helium. This was the replacement race frame for the Team & was manufactured from September 1981.
It was available until the end of manufacture in 1983. (these also had their own serial numbers starting from 1 - it is thought only 150 of these were made)24. This was seen on the earliest of the 24' Cruiser models & was followed by a one or two digit serial but no date code.C. This was used on later 24' Cruiser models. Very low production numbers but part of the general serial sequence we thinkCR. This was used on 26' Cruiser models. Same as 24' modelsM.
This would indicate the Mountain Bike model that was largely based on the 26' Cruiser frame. I am sorry, but you are only confusing me even more. If I understand correctly, after removing the prefix and the welder's code you are left with a sequence of digits. I think you have now also narrowed the years to 1979 - 1983. And I believe the serial number cannot start with a zero.Therefore, if the sequence begins with one of these:122123we need something more to tell us what these mean. Everything else should be very easy (unless I am missing something again).
I am sorry, but you are only confusing me even more. If I understand correctly, after removing the prefix and the welder's code you are left with a sequence of digits. I think you have now also narrowed the years to 1979 - 1983. I don't care if you write it out as text - as long as it becomes an algorithm (i.e.
Something that a stupid machine like a computer can follow blindly, without any judgment calls of its own).-P.S. You can skip the prefix and welder extraction part - these are pretty clear, I think. Start with the following input as being known:FrameNumber - a variable number of digits;Prefix - as per the list of possible prefixes you have provided (incl. '24')Location - a Boolean value, I think? Edited September 21, 2010 by Guest.
I don't care if you write it out as text - as long as it becomes an algorithm (i.e. Something that a stupid machine like a computer can follow blindly, without any judgment calls of its own).-P.S. You can skip the prefix and welder extraction part - these are pretty clear, I think.
Start with the following input as being known:FrameNumber - a variable number of digits;Prefix - as per the list of possible prefixes you have provided (incl. '24')Location - a Boolean value, I think?OK how is this then - I have made a flow chart of sorts to help(all the symbol boxes made it spread too far over the page so I coded the text in colour instead - the legend for the colours is at the bottom of the page)Thank you ever so much for your patience and effort so far!
Are all bikes manufactured in the eighties?2. How many welders are there? Is the welder always identified by a single letter?1. We think all bikes are manufactured in the eighties - you would not believe how hard it was to crack this code - the bikes made in the seventies have totally different serials - which still haven't been deciphered yet2. From what we can tell there were 3 welders all identified by a single letter - their first initial(there are also prefixes for special edition bikes but they are quite rare and can be dealt with on a case to case basis ie T for team rider bike). What I'm not clear about is what they did in October, November or December, as there appears to be only a single digit for the month.HTHBrianThat is what confused us for some time!Following the sequence, purely for illustrations sake, the last December 1981 frame, build sequence 256 welded by Mark Bradshaw bike would be stamped121256Mthen a January 1982 welded by Darrell would be12257DWhen we only had a few frames as reference you could understand our difficulty in establishing their heritageCheersBen.
I am afraid I don't follow this fully. If there are two 'versions' of the frame number and each needs to be interpreted differently, then the version should be entered into another field (assuming it's not apparent from the frame number alone).Now I would suggest you sit down with a piece of paper and write down the steps you would take to identify the month and the year without a computer (think of this as writing directions for a stupid but reliable person).
Haro Bmx Serial Number Lookup
Then the actual calculation will become easy to construct - assuming the task is possible in the first place. Hi Ben, and Welcome to the Forum,I've been toying with your sample data in TextWrangler, and I think it might be possible to do the lion's share of this parsing out using grep patterns in TextWrangler or BBEdit.The real challenge is the Oct - Jan productions, however, I was able to parse out the Dec and Jan example you gave, using a couple of greps. However, the real test would be with real data.Are you trying to breakout this data on bikes you own, bikes you want to purchase, or are you doing this for all of the bikes manufactured by these two?Do you have a complete list of those you want to parse out?If so, why not post it as an attachment to a Reply, so that I can get a better feel for the complete picture?HTHLee Edited September 20, 2010 by Guest.
Patterson Bmx For Sale
Patterson Bmx Serial Numbers Chart
Hi Lee and thanks others for your repliesWhat we are trying to create is a couple of things in one for the enthusiasts of this particular Australian made brand.Firstly a decoder of the number stamped on the framesSecondly an historical archive of the frames themselves including some other aspects such as paint finishes and the likeHere's the breakdown as we established it, in a little greater detailFor the frame stamped 501161D as an example5= May some serials began with 10, 11, or 12 for October, November or December. Eg 110xxxx X0= 1980 they used the last digit of the year & will always be 9,0,1,2,or 3.1161= the serial number of the frame. This can be as short as one digit, ie, 911 for Sept, 1981, frame number 1.D= Darrell Kendell, the man who actually built the frame in the factory.Other code letters used as a suffix areM= Mark Bradley who was a frame welder, a designer, test rider & Factory Team rider.R= Ray Williams. He is currently the state Liberal member for Hawksbury.X= Not currently known but thought to have been used on Factory Team race bikes.Prefix codes were sometimes included and can also be used as qualifiersTF= Team Frame. This was used on the 'Team' models, which was their production race model from December 1979 to August 1981TH= Team Helium. This was the replacement race frame for the Team & was manufactured from September 1981.
It was available until the end of manufacture in 1983. (these also had their own serial numbers starting from 1 - it is thought only 150 of these were made)24. This was seen on the earliest of the 24' Cruiser models & was followed by a one or two digit serial but no date code.C. This was used on later 24' Cruiser models. Very low production numbers but part of the general serial sequence we thinkCR. This was used on 26' Cruiser models. Same as 24' modelsM.
This would indicate the Mountain Bike model that was largely based on the 26' Cruiser frame. I am sorry, but you are only confusing me even more. If I understand correctly, after removing the prefix and the welder's code you are left with a sequence of digits. I think you have now also narrowed the years to 1979 - 1983. And I believe the serial number cannot start with a zero.Therefore, if the sequence begins with one of these:122123we need something more to tell us what these mean. Everything else should be very easy (unless I am missing something again).
Patterson Bmx Serial Numbers Generator
I am sorry, but you are only confusing me even more. If I understand correctly, after removing the prefix and the welder's code you are left with a sequence of digits. I think you have now also narrowed the years to 1979 - 1983. I don't care if you write it out as text - as long as it becomes an algorithm (i.e.
Patterson Bmx Serial Numbers List
Something that a stupid machine like a computer can follow blindly, without any judgment calls of its own).-P.S. You can skip the prefix and welder extraction part - these are pretty clear, I think. Start with the following input as being known:FrameNumber - a variable number of digits;Prefix - as per the list of possible prefixes you have provided (incl. '24')Location - a Boolean value, I think? Edited September 21, 2010 by Guest.
Are all bikes manufactured in the eighties?2. How many welders are there? Is the welder always identified by a single letter?1. We think all bikes are manufactured in the eighties - you would not believe how hard it was to crack this code - the bikes made in the seventies have totally different serials - which still haven't been deciphered yet2. From what we can tell there were 3 welders all identified by a single letter - their first initial(there are also prefixes for special edition bikes but they are quite rare and can be dealt with on a case to case basis ie T for team rider bike). What I'm not clear about is what they did in October, November or December, as there appears to be only a single digit for the month.HTHBrianThat is what confused us for some time!Following the sequence, purely for illustrations sake, the last December 1981 frame, build sequence 256 welded by Mark Bradshaw bike would be stamped121256Mthen a January 1982 welded by Darrell would be12257DWhen we only had a few frames as reference you could understand our difficulty in establishing their heritageCheersBen.
I am afraid I don't follow this fully. If there are two 'versions' of the frame number and each needs to be interpreted differently, then the version should be entered into another field (assuming it's not apparent from the frame number alone).Now I would suggest you sit down with a piece of paper and write down the steps you would take to identify the month and the year without a computer (think of this as writing directions for a stupid but reliable person).
Then the actual calculation will become easy to construct - assuming the task is possible in the first place. Hi Ben, and Welcome to the Forum,I've been toying with your sample data in TextWrangler, and I think it might be possible to do the lion's share of this parsing out using grep patterns in TextWrangler or BBEdit.The real challenge is the Oct - Jan productions, however, I was able to parse out the Dec and Jan example you gave, using a couple of greps. However, the real test would be with real data.Are you trying to breakout this data on bikes you own, bikes you want to purchase, or are you doing this for all of the bikes manufactured by these two?Do you have a complete list of those you want to parse out?If so, why not post it as an attachment to a Reply, so that I can get a better feel for the complete picture?HTHLee Edited September 20, 2010 by Guest.
Patterson Bmx For Sale
Hi Lee and thanks others for your repliesWhat we are trying to create is a couple of things in one for the enthusiasts of this particular Australian made brand.Firstly a decoder of the number stamped on the framesSecondly an historical archive of the frames themselves including some other aspects such as paint finishes and the likeHere's the breakdown as we established it, in a little greater detailFor the frame stamped 501161D as an example5= May some serials began with 10, 11, or 12 for October, November or December. Eg 110xxxx X0= 1980 they used the last digit of the year & will always be 9,0,1,2,or 3.1161= the serial number of the frame. This can be as short as one digit, ie, 911 for Sept, 1981, frame number 1.D= Darrell Kendell, the man who actually built the frame in the factory.Other code letters used as a suffix areM= Mark Bradley who was a frame welder, a designer, test rider & Factory Team rider.R= Ray Williams. He is currently the state Liberal member for Hawksbury.X= Not currently known but thought to have been used on Factory Team race bikes.Prefix codes were sometimes included and can also be used as qualifiersTF= Team Frame. This was used on the 'Team' models, which was their production race model from December 1979 to August 1981TH= Team Helium. This was the replacement race frame for the Team & was manufactured from September 1981.
It was available until the end of manufacture in 1983. (these also had their own serial numbers starting from 1 - it is thought only 150 of these were made)24. This was seen on the earliest of the 24' Cruiser models & was followed by a one or two digit serial but no date code.C. This was used on later 24' Cruiser models. Very low production numbers but part of the general serial sequence we thinkCR. This was used on 26' Cruiser models. Same as 24' modelsM.
This would indicate the Mountain Bike model that was largely based on the 26' Cruiser frame. I am sorry, but you are only confusing me even more. If I understand correctly, after removing the prefix and the welder's code you are left with a sequence of digits. I think you have now also narrowed the years to 1979 - 1983. And I believe the serial number cannot start with a zero.Therefore, if the sequence begins with one of these:122123we need something more to tell us what these mean. Everything else should be very easy (unless I am missing something again).
I am sorry, but you are only confusing me even more. If I understand correctly, after removing the prefix and the welder's code you are left with a sequence of digits. I think you have now also narrowed the years to 1979 - 1983. I don't care if you write it out as text - as long as it becomes an algorithm (i.e.
Something that a stupid machine like a computer can follow blindly, without any judgment calls of its own).-P.S. You can skip the prefix and welder extraction part - these are pretty clear, I think. Start with the following input as being known:FrameNumber - a variable number of digits;Prefix - as per the list of possible prefixes you have provided (incl. '24')Location - a Boolean value, I think? Edited September 21, 2010 by Guest.
I don't care if you write it out as text - as long as it becomes an algorithm (i.e. Something that a stupid machine like a computer can follow blindly, without any judgment calls of its own).-P.S. You can skip the prefix and welder extraction part - these are pretty clear, I think.
Start with the following input as being known:FrameNumber - a variable number of digits;Prefix - as per the list of possible prefixes you have provided (incl. '24')Location - a Boolean value, I think?OK how is this then - I have made a flow chart of sorts to help(all the symbol boxes made it spread too far over the page so I coded the text in colour instead - the legend for the colours is at the bottom of the page)Thank you ever so much for your patience and effort so far!
Are all bikes manufactured in the eighties?2. How many welders are there? Is the welder always identified by a single letter?1. We think all bikes are manufactured in the eighties - you would not believe how hard it was to crack this code - the bikes made in the seventies have totally different serials - which still haven't been deciphered yet2. From what we can tell there were 3 welders all identified by a single letter - their first initial(there are also prefixes for special edition bikes but they are quite rare and can be dealt with on a case to case basis ie T for team rider bike). What I'm not clear about is what they did in October, November or December, as there appears to be only a single digit for the month.HTHBrianThat is what confused us for some time!Following the sequence, purely for illustrations sake, the last December 1981 frame, build sequence 256 welded by Mark Bradshaw bike would be stamped121256Mthen a January 1982 welded by Darrell would be12257DWhen we only had a few frames as reference you could understand our difficulty in establishing their heritageCheersBen.
I am afraid I don't follow this fully. If there are two 'versions' of the frame number and each needs to be interpreted differently, then the version should be entered into another field (assuming it's not apparent from the frame number alone).Now I would suggest you sit down with a piece of paper and write down the steps you would take to identify the month and the year without a computer (think of this as writing directions for a stupid but reliable person).
Haro Bmx Serial Number Lookup
Then the actual calculation will become easy to construct - assuming the task is possible in the first place. Hi Ben, and Welcome to the Forum,I've been toying with your sample data in TextWrangler, and I think it might be possible to do the lion's share of this parsing out using grep patterns in TextWrangler or BBEdit.The real challenge is the Oct - Jan productions, however, I was able to parse out the Dec and Jan example you gave, using a couple of greps. However, the real test would be with real data.Are you trying to breakout this data on bikes you own, bikes you want to purchase, or are you doing this for all of the bikes manufactured by these two?Do you have a complete list of those you want to parse out?If so, why not post it as an attachment to a Reply, so that I can get a better feel for the complete picture?HTHLee Edited September 20, 2010 by Guest.
Patterson Bmx For Sale
Patterson Bmx Serial Numbers Chart
Hi Lee and thanks others for your repliesWhat we are trying to create is a couple of things in one for the enthusiasts of this particular Australian made brand.Firstly a decoder of the number stamped on the framesSecondly an historical archive of the frames themselves including some other aspects such as paint finishes and the likeHere's the breakdown as we established it, in a little greater detailFor the frame stamped 501161D as an example5= May some serials began with 10, 11, or 12 for October, November or December. Eg 110xxxx X0= 1980 they used the last digit of the year & will always be 9,0,1,2,or 3.1161= the serial number of the frame. This can be as short as one digit, ie, 911 for Sept, 1981, frame number 1.D= Darrell Kendell, the man who actually built the frame in the factory.Other code letters used as a suffix areM= Mark Bradley who was a frame welder, a designer, test rider & Factory Team rider.R= Ray Williams. He is currently the state Liberal member for Hawksbury.X= Not currently known but thought to have been used on Factory Team race bikes.Prefix codes were sometimes included and can also be used as qualifiersTF= Team Frame. This was used on the 'Team' models, which was their production race model from December 1979 to August 1981TH= Team Helium. This was the replacement race frame for the Team & was manufactured from September 1981.
It was available until the end of manufacture in 1983. (these also had their own serial numbers starting from 1 - it is thought only 150 of these were made)24. This was seen on the earliest of the 24' Cruiser models & was followed by a one or two digit serial but no date code.C. This was used on later 24' Cruiser models. Very low production numbers but part of the general serial sequence we thinkCR. This was used on 26' Cruiser models. Same as 24' modelsM.
This would indicate the Mountain Bike model that was largely based on the 26' Cruiser frame. I am sorry, but you are only confusing me even more. If I understand correctly, after removing the prefix and the welder's code you are left with a sequence of digits. I think you have now also narrowed the years to 1979 - 1983. And I believe the serial number cannot start with a zero.Therefore, if the sequence begins with one of these:122123we need something more to tell us what these mean. Everything else should be very easy (unless I am missing something again).
Patterson Bmx Serial Numbers Generator
I am sorry, but you are only confusing me even more. If I understand correctly, after removing the prefix and the welder's code you are left with a sequence of digits. I think you have now also narrowed the years to 1979 - 1983. I don't care if you write it out as text - as long as it becomes an algorithm (i.e.
Patterson Bmx Serial Numbers List
Something that a stupid machine like a computer can follow blindly, without any judgment calls of its own).-P.S. You can skip the prefix and welder extraction part - these are pretty clear, I think. Start with the following input as being known:FrameNumber - a variable number of digits;Prefix - as per the list of possible prefixes you have provided (incl. '24')Location - a Boolean value, I think? Edited September 21, 2010 by Guest.
Patterson Bmx Serial Numbers 22
I don't care if you write it out as text - as long as it becomes an algorithm (i.e. Something that a stupid machine like a computer can follow blindly, without any judgment calls of its own).-P.S. You can skip the prefix and welder extraction part - these are pretty clear, I think.
Patterson Bmx Serial Numbers Lookup
Start with the following input as being known:FrameNumber - a variable number of digits;Prefix - as per the list of possible prefixes you have provided (incl. '24')Location - a Boolean value, I think?OK how is this then - I have made a flow chart of sorts to help(all the symbol boxes made it spread too far over the page so I coded the text in colour instead - the legend for the colours is at the bottom of the page)Thank you ever so much for your patience and effort so far!