Want this question answered?
Not sure what the 2 means. But real silver will have a .925 stamp.
According to research by Waite and Ernst (The Trapdoor Springfield), your 1873 was manufactured in the last quarter (Oct/Dec) 1873. The number '25' on the stock is probably a rifle rack number so that it could quickly be placed back where it belonged in an arms room.
look with a 10xloop, number is tiny, tiny, on left sides
the foul lines come directly to the point on the back of home plate. that is why a ball off the plate is a fair ball
Numbers on a coin usually signify the year it was minted.
Not sure what the 2 means. But real silver will have a .925 stamp.
1) Slide thefront right seat back fully.... 2) Lift plastic cover.... 3) Chassis number will be stamped on a metal plate.... Dr. Fish
dates back to Span. American war
on the back
If it is marked "STERLING" OR "925" on the back of it, it means the silver is about 92.5% of the total weight of that piece. Otherwise the piece of silver plate flatware contains very insignificant amount of silver.
no, is older plat from Danmark
It's in three places: on a plate at the bottom of the windshield on a plate behind the spare tire in the trunk stamped into the transmission tunnel under the back seat
pull up on the silver knob on the bolt, and pull the bolt out the back. Remove the silver holding pin, near the back on the right side, then take off the back plate.
The number is called a plate serial number. All bills have them, not just silver certificates. Bills are printed in groups using large printing plates and sheets of paper that are then cut apart into individual notes. The serial number indicates which plate was used to print a specific set of bills. The front of each bill also includes a plate position indicator that tells where it was located in the group.
Fisher Sterling Silver STG JMF stamped into the back of the charm/pendant: STG stands for silver and JMF for J.M. Fisher Company
On the front of the car or the back.
It means that somebody defaced the coin, and will reduce the coin's collector value. Dan