[Bell Historians] Birmingham University

steven_blakemore at ZTEkXZVFvRCtq3Ub6fpDcBscEHTmgI5ihMuf0S5rqvLZ0MTYN-4J1xY1LV3sZRi2bjx9W5Ykm0p0MTQxwqoq1A.yahoo.invalid steven_blakemore at ZTEkXZVFvRCtq3Ub6fpDcBscEHTmgI5ihMuf0S5rqvLZ0MTYN-4J1xY1LV3sZRi2bjx9W5Ykm0p0MTQxwqoq1A.yahoo.invalid
Fri Oct 22 17:44:54 BST 2010


Thankyou for clearing that up. I didn't think there would be a full circle ring of 10; but I was just checking.

--- In bellhistorians at yahoogroups.com, Richard Smith <richard at ...> wrote:
>
> steven_blakemore at ... wrote:
> 
> > Thank you very much, for your reply. one last question! 
> > "The notes of the bells are as nos. 1, 2, 3, 6 and 10 of a 
> > ring of ten in G." does this mean there is a full circle 
> > ring of ten, or have I got the wrong end of the stick?
> 
> It means there are five bells.  They have the notes G, D, G, 
> A, B, which are notes that bells 10, 6, 3, 2 and 1 from a 
> ring of ten have.  These are the five notes needed to sound 
> the Cambridge quarters (sometimes also called the 
> Westminster chimes).
> 
> RAS
>



           



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