[QUOTE=40 Nuck;68663]Thanks Chris,
In answering one question, you may also have answered another that I have yet to get a good answer on ... model year changeover. Was June typically the model year changeover? I would've guessed Sept - Oct. The reason this is important to me is that given my serial number, I would've thought a late 1939 date code would be appropriate. If the model year changeover was typically in June, however, maybe a mid-year date code would be best. My transmission is not original to my bike, but my engine, frame, heads, springer, cylinders are consistent. It seems that if we knew typical monthly production and model-year changeover, we could reasonably estimate the "birth-month" of our bikes.
The year model changeover got earlier as years went by. I can remember going to York a few years ago in June. The tour was shut down because they were in changeover mode.
Let's say your 1940 has one G 9 and one H 9 rocker box. Add to this an E 9 transmission case with a G 9 lid and an H 9 kicker. Your low number engine cases may have one side an G and the other side a H. These are the dates the part was cast. Not the date the motorcycle was built. I have never seen a bike where all the date codes were an exact match.
I remember the AMF days of the warehouse in the sky at York. Hundreds of engines and transmissions hanging from a steadily moving conveyer belt traveling back and forth across the ceiling of the plant. I watched the worker while he was plucking engines from this never ending line of engines. Not all engines were the same. Some bare and others black. Color coded tags on the engine told what model bike it was for at a glance. He would wait till the appropriate color tag engine came by a grabbed it. No particular order. I am sure that engines could stay up there for days or even weeks before being selected.
In answering one question, you may also have answered another that I have yet to get a good answer on ... model year changeover. Was June typically the model year changeover? I would've guessed Sept - Oct. The reason this is important to me is that given my serial number, I would've thought a late 1939 date code would be appropriate. If the model year changeover was typically in June, however, maybe a mid-year date code would be best. My transmission is not original to my bike, but my engine, frame, heads, springer, cylinders are consistent. It seems that if we knew typical monthly production and model-year changeover, we could reasonably estimate the "birth-month" of our bikes.
The year model changeover got earlier as years went by. I can remember going to York a few years ago in June. The tour was shut down because they were in changeover mode.
Let's say your 1940 has one G 9 and one H 9 rocker box. Add to this an E 9 transmission case with a G 9 lid and an H 9 kicker. Your low number engine cases may have one side an G and the other side a H. These are the dates the part was cast. Not the date the motorcycle was built. I have never seen a bike where all the date codes were an exact match.
I remember the AMF days of the warehouse in the sky at York. Hundreds of engines and transmissions hanging from a steadily moving conveyer belt traveling back and forth across the ceiling of the plant. I watched the worker while he was plucking engines from this never ending line of engines. Not all engines were the same. Some bare and others black. Color coded tags on the engine told what model bike it was for at a glance. He would wait till the appropriate color tag engine came by a grabbed it. No particular order. I am sure that engines could stay up there for days or even weeks before being selected.
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