<html><body bgcolor="#FFFFFF"><div>Surely the G & J bell doesn't exist any more. The present no.7 was cast by Whitechapel a few years ago.</div><div><br></div><div>R<br><br>Sent from Richard Offen's iPhone</div><div><br>On 24/10/2010, at 10:46 PM, "alanaj8283" <<a href="mailto:aaj.buswell@PK_wW8xtZxRWUxoX76BMPMKW1z7uAoe58-MNRvFJL_c2DfWtJ_r50U6cZbdvbpK_yilTSdh8x9G6TI6XjHp9LD7dFQ.yahoo.invalid">aaj.buswell@PK_wW8xtZxRWUxoX76BMPMKW1z7uAoe58-MNRvFJL_c2DfWtJ_r50U6cZbdvbpK_yilTSdh8x9G6TI6XjHp9LD7dFQ.yahoo.invalid</a>> wrote:<br><br></div><div></div><blockquote type="cite"><div>
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<p>My attention has been drawn to the fact that there may be two ways of measuring a bell's diameter. Bell No.7 of the G&J Riverside Carillon, weighing only 15lbs, has been measured as 7" (no typo error)on the outside (lip to lip)but in the G&J Tuning Books it is given as 5 7/8". The measurements have been checked by my informer and shows the smaller measurement to be that of the INSIDE of the bell. What of the other bells here, I wonder?<br>
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Is this the usual practice of Cyril or may be anyone else?<br>
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AAJB<br>
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