Code and Year of Manufacture
After 1927 all the Spanish arms that are proven in the Proving stand Celebrate of Eibar are marked with recording, normally done on the frame, in which it appears the year of manufacture codified in letters.
Table of correspondence between letters and years of manufacture. To raise to images or archives multimedia
Code | Year | Code | Year | Code | Year |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
A | 1927 | A1 | 1955 | A2 | 1981 |
B | 1928 | B1 | 1956 | B2 | 1982 |
C | 1929 | C1 | 1957 | C2 | 1983 |
CH | 1930 | CH1 | RIEN | CH2 | RIEN |
D | 1931 | D1 | 1958 | D2 | 1984 |
E | 1932 | E1 | 1959 | E2 | 1985 |
F | 1933 | F1 | 1960 | F2 | 1986 |
G | 1934 | G1 | 1961 | G2 | 1987 |
H | 1935 | H1 | 1962 | H2 | 1988 |
I | 1936 | I1 | 1963 | I2 | 1989 |
J | 1937 | J1 | 1964 | J2 | 1990 |
K | 1938 | K1 | 1965 | K2 | 1991 |
L | 1939 | L1 | 1966 | L2 | 1992 |
LL | 1940 | LL1 | RIEN | LL2 | RIEN |
M | 1941 | M1 | 1967 | M2 | 1993 |
N | 1942 | N1 | 1968 | N2 | 1994 |
Ñ | 1943 | Ñ1 | 1969 | Ñ2 | 1995 |
O | 1944 | O1 | 1970 | O2 | 1996 |
P | 1945 | P1 | 1971 | P2 | 1997 |
Q | 1946 | Q1 | 1972 | Q2 | 1998 |
R | 1947 | R1 | 1973 | R2 | 1999 |
S | 1948 | S1 | 1974 | S2 | 2000 |
T | 1949 | T1 | 1975 | T2 | 2001 |
U | 1950 | U1 | 1976 | U2 | 2002 |
V | 1951 | V1 | 1977 | V2 | 2003 |
X | 1952 | X1 | 1978 | X2 | 2004 |
Y | 1953 | Y1 | 1979 | Y2 | 2005 |
Z | 1954 | Z1 | 1980 | Z2 | 2006 |
Read more about this topic: Star Bonifacio Echeverria
Famous quotes containing the words code and, code, year and/or manufacture:
“Faultless honesty is a sine qua non of business life. Not alone the honesty according to the moral code and the Bible. When I speak of honesty I refer to the small, hidden, evasive meannesses of our natures. I speak of the honesty of ourselves to ourselves.”
—Alice Foote MacDougall (18671945)
“Many people will say to working mothers, in effect, I dont think you can have it all. The phrase for have it all is code for have your cake and eat it too. What these people really mean is that achievement in the workplace has always come at a priceusually a significant personal price; conversely, women who stayed home with their children were seen as having sacrificed a great deal of their own ambition for their families.”
—Anne C. Weisberg (20th century)
“Mothers are not the nameless, faceless stereotypes who appear once a year on a greeting card with their virtues set to prose, but women who have been dealt a hand for life and play each card one at a time the best way they know how. No mother is all good or all bad, all laughing or all serious, all loving or all angry. Ambivalence rushes through their veins.”
—Erma Bombeck (20th century)
“Culture is an instrument wielded by teachers to manufacture teachers, who, in their turn, will manufacture still more teachers.”
—Simone Weil (19091943)