<html><body bgcolor="#FFFFFF"><div>The description starts at the crown of the bell, so 3,2-3,3-2 would indicate three wires on the crown of the bell, two above the inscription band and three below, three where the sound bow begins to curve out and two at the lip. </div><div><br></div><div>There are infinite variations on this, for instance the usual configuration on a modern Whitechapel bell is 3,2-2,3-2.</div><div><br></div><div>Hope this helps. </div><div><br></div><div>Richard<br><br>Sent from Richard Offen's iPhone</div><div><br>On 12/01/2011, at 12:33 AM, Carl Scott Zimmerman <<a href="mailto:csz_stl@H2Qhq3qr-pfu6ila-MRr5cOtaMurGYmiBugE8f2Lp69Ur2q-0StjEqcCXw7Kc1VuOgtHschFhMvwTuKrJQ.yahoo.invalid">csz_stl@H2Qhq3qr-pfu6ila-MRr5cOtaMurGYmiBugE8f2Lp69Ur2q-0StjEqcCXw7Kc1VuOgtHschFhMvwTuKrJQ.yahoo.invalid</a>> wrote:<br><br></div><div></div><blockquote type="cite"><div>
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</p><div>In a recent report of a stolen bell, the description of it
included this line:</div>
<div><x> </x><font face="Times New Roman">Moulding wires 3,2-3,3-2.</font></div>
<div>A Google search for "moulding wires" did not reveal any
description of whatever encoding scheme is used for the pattern.
What does this mean? and what other variations of this encoding scheme
exist?</div>
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<div>Thanks in advance,</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>Carl</div>
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