- Vintage Bicycle Serial Number Lookup
- Phillips Bicycle Serial Numbers
- Phillips Bicycles Serial Numbers List
Serial number dating. We explain the nuances of determining the age of a Paramount by its serial number. Provenance Services. We report on our extensive collection of records from 1962 to 1979. Schwinn/Paramount Catalog Scans. Thanks to the dedicated work of T.R. Findley and friends, we present a collection of catalog scans from the late 1890. The very first Paramounts seemed to have had serial numbers starting with “A” followed by two or three digits. This seems to have been a system started by Emil Wastyn. We found a very early Paramount – claimed to be a 1938-9 vintage – with serial number A545. Little is known about serial numbers for bikes built after World War II. For some grooming devices like the OneBlade, the model and serial numbers are located on the back of the handle. The model number usually starts with 2 letters followed by 4 digits, e.g. The serial number has the format of YYWW (Year and week).
These websites help bike owners find their stolen bikes using the bike’s serial number. It’s quite easy to use a serial number lookup website. All you need to do is to enter your bike’s serial number using numbers and letters only without spaces or special characters into a. Model number (e.g. GC6440, 37PFL7403D/10 or SA13000/02) or product name (e.g. Shaver, GoGEAR or Robust). Please consider the following suggestions to find your product.
|
|
Phillips
From Graces Guide
Phillips Cycles were makers of bicycles, bicycle parts and later motorcycles of Credenda Works, Smethwick, Birmingham.
John Alfred Phillips formed a partnership with Ernest William Bohle making brakes and pedals for bicycles.
1908 The Birmingham firm of J. A. Phillips and Co, manufacturer of bicycles and bicycle components, bought the Credenda Works and gave up its Birmingham premises.
c.1920 Tube Investments AGM was told that Phillips, a maker of bicycle parts, had been acquired in the past year[1].
1952 Operating company was registered as Phillips Cycles Ltd[2]
1954 Having previously been in the cycle business, the company entered the powered market late that year with a complete machine derived from a bicycle. It had a 49cc two-stroke engine mounted above the bottom bracket, chain-driven rear wheel, the petroil tank on the top tube and braced forks. It was listed for the following three years.
1956 The Gadabout moped appeared, with a 49cc Rex engine, two speeds, spine frame and telescopic forks.
1956 Tube Investments subsidiary the British Cycle Corporation was formed to take over and control its bicycle making subsidiaries in the Birmingham area, namely Armstrong Cycles, Brampton Fittings, Hercules Cycle and Motor Co, Phillips Cycles, and Walton and Brown[3]; the activities would be concentrated in a large factory at Handsworth; large redundancies followed.
1959 Added to the range was a Panda, a three-speed Gadabout and another with a 50cc Villiers engine.
1960 A Panda Plus was added.
1962 The range was cut back to the Gadabout with either a Rex or a Villiers engine, but later in the year two new models appeared. These were based on Raleigh mopeds and made under licence from Motobécane of France.
By 1964 The moped had been built for two years; then the owners, Raleigh, dropped the name.
See Also: Renowned The World Over - The Phillips Cycle Company by Sam Whitehouse
See Also
Sources of Information
Vintage Bicycle Serial Number Lookup
- ↑The Times, 9 December 1920
- ↑National Archives
- ↑The Times, 21 August 1956
Phillips Bicycle Serial Numbers
- The British Motorcycle Directory - Over 1,100 Marques from 1888 - by Roy Bacon and Ken Hallworth. Pub: The Crowood Press 2004 ISBN 1 86126 674 X