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gnilkoorb

2nd December 2016, 19:39
Hello...can anyone help me with the following ditloids...
1507 SSD
1 F the P
1903 A1 FRN
2C 3 a C

Have been trying for over a month now..... Thx
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faraday

2nd December 2016, 20:07
2nd one, 1 f the p, possibly "one for the pot" as in tea?
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escher

2nd December 2016, 20:14
2 company 3 a crowd ?
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escher

2nd December 2016, 20:21
1903 A1 first registration number ?
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bigbadmarty2

2nd December 2016, 20:49
15th July - St. Swithin's Day
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gnilkoorb

2nd December 2016, 22:00
Wow - thanks guys!- i cant believe some of these were so obvious, though have to admit 1903 A1 FRN is my favourite - thanks once again :-)
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gnilkoorb

3rd December 2016, 17:12
Hello ...one more I have to admit defeat on.... 8 B and AW?
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scorpiojo

3rd December 2016, 17:22
8 bells and all's well
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scorpiojo

3rd December 2016, 17:24
Eight Bells - Aboard Navy ships, bells are struck to designate the hours of being on watch. Each watch is four hours in length. One bell is struck after the first half-hour has passed, two bells after one hour has passed, three bells after an hour and a half, four bells after two hours, and so forth up to eight bells are struck at the completion of the four hours. Completing a watch with no incidents to report was "Eight bells and all is well." The practice of using bells stems from the days of the sailing ships. Sailors couldn't afford to have their own time pieces and relied on the ship's bells to tell time. The ship's boy kept time by using a half-hour glass. Each time the sand ran out, he would turn the glass over and ring the appropriate number of bells.
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