Brooks Saddles Date Code Decoding
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Brooks Saddles Date Code Decoding
I have a Brooks B66 that was bought new in the late spring 1978 in New Paltz, NY.
In the course of rehabbing it recently, I noticed it had a 3 character code 'O K 7' inscribed on the inside underside of the saddle top.
The first place I went to find out what the code might mean was vintage-trek.com. Alas, it appears that the Date Code key had been lost, according to a correspondent quoted there.
But I'm wondering...could the '7' be for the year 1977, then the 'K' for the month November?
Goodness knows what the first character--either an O or a zero, might mean...
Anyone have further anecdotal 411 to add?
In the course of rehabbing it recently, I noticed it had a 3 character code 'O K 7' inscribed on the inside underside of the saddle top.
The first place I went to find out what the code might mean was vintage-trek.com. Alas, it appears that the Date Code key had been lost, according to a correspondent quoted there.
But I'm wondering...could the '7' be for the year 1977, then the 'K' for the month November?
Goodness knows what the first character--either an O or a zero, might mean...
Anyone have further anecdotal 411 to add?
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I bought mine a little more than a year ago and mine says O C 7 underneath it....
Oh yeah, and it's a honey B.17 Special.
Oh yeah, and it's a honey B.17 Special.
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This might be of interest.
Prior to sometime in the 1960s the inside of leather side flaps were stamped with a date code. The stamp denoted the month and year of manufacture. Mrs. O'Donnell* writes: "Unfortunately, the "code" book is now lost so we cannot decipher the actual codes used at that time. It is, sadly, not quite as simple as A=January, B=February etc. This 'flap' stamping changed to the frame stamping around the 1960's although there was an 'overlap' period where both the leather and the frame were stamped."
The metal frames of the saddles were stamped with the date of manufacture from sometime in the 1960s to about 1988.
The current method of stamping Brooks saddles is a colored stamp on the underside of the saddle, with a number for the year surrounding a letter for the month.
(*The above Brooks information was provided in an e-mail from Mrs. E. O'Donnell in the Sales Department of Sturmey-Archer, when that company owned Brooks. Mrs. O'Donnell was writing to Robert Williams in response to his query about date codes. Our thanks to these two individuals and to Larry Osborn, who secured a copy of the original e-mail.)
Prior to sometime in the 1960s the inside of leather side flaps were stamped with a date code. The stamp denoted the month and year of manufacture. Mrs. O'Donnell* writes: "Unfortunately, the "code" book is now lost so we cannot decipher the actual codes used at that time. It is, sadly, not quite as simple as A=January, B=February etc. This 'flap' stamping changed to the frame stamping around the 1960's although there was an 'overlap' period where both the leather and the frame were stamped."
The metal frames of the saddles were stamped with the date of manufacture from sometime in the 1960s to about 1988.
The current method of stamping Brooks saddles is a colored stamp on the underside of the saddle, with a number for the year surrounding a letter for the month.
(*The above Brooks information was provided in an e-mail from Mrs. E. O'Donnell in the Sales Department of Sturmey-Archer, when that company owned Brooks. Mrs. O'Donnell was writing to Robert Williams in response to his query about date codes. Our thanks to these two individuals and to Larry Osborn, who secured a copy of the original e-mail.)
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The B.66 on my '80 Raleigh has (ilegible letter)79 stamped on the underside of the 'half moon' metal part.
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I recently acquired a Brooks Professional that I was told came off an early Schwinn Paramount. I was looking for a means to date it and stumbled upon this thread. I figured I would detail my findings in hope that it will help another.
I've seen the information from the Sturmey-Archer email in a few posts, so I figured I'd start there. Lucky for me, it looks like I have one of the saddles from the "overlap period" and that used BOTH dating methods. Looking closely and under bright light, I was able to make out a "B" over the numbers "73" on the rear frame. According to the email, it dates this saddle at February 1973. This took several attempts to capture using my cell phone camera, but its actually quite clear and unsmudged in person.
https://i127.photobucket.com/albums/p...1-Version2.jpg
Now for you puzzle solvers out there, the stamp on the leather is "L I C." I can figure a possible "3" from the "C", but how February or a 7 come from the "L" and "I", I haven't a clue.
https://i127.photobucket.com/albums/p...l/IMG_2682.jpg
Other photos of the saddle can be seen here:
Top: https://i127.photobucket.com/albums/p...l/IMG_2686.jpg
Bottom: https://i127.photobucket.com/albums/p...l/IMG_2685.jpg
Side: https://i127.photobucket.com/albums/p...l/IMG_2687.jpg
Rear badge: https://i127.photobucket.com/albums/p...l/IMG_2683.jpg
Post bracket: https://i127.photobucket.com/albums/p...0/IMG_2679.jpg
The saddle is in amazing shape for being 40 years old! The seller said it was from his fathers Paramount and that the saddle itself has been stored in a cloth bag, inside a shoebox, and in the closet for years. It has a few "character" scuffs, but the leather is not cracked at all. It has no sag or sit bone imprints in it. It seems to be broke in like a 5 year old saddle, but has patina far beyond that. The copper rivets look shinier in photos than they actually are. Some of them have a greenish patina that I was careful not to wipe off. I wiped it down with a terry cloth and gave it a coat of Lexol. It's beautiful - in my eyes. Soft, comfortable, and the smell reminds me off tack hanging in an old barn back home.
Anyone know what these vintage saddles in this condition sell for in today's market? Does the fact that the month and year are visibly dated add any value? What about the fact that it came off a Paramount? Do Paramount owners/builders seek original replacements in this kind of condition?
I planned on keeping it and putting it on my Soma Smoothie (century bike), but I'd be curious of what the estimated resale value is. I know only the just of Brooks saddles but nothing from the vintage era. This saddle was being ridden 15 years before I was conceived.
I've seen the information from the Sturmey-Archer email in a few posts, so I figured I'd start there. Lucky for me, it looks like I have one of the saddles from the "overlap period" and that used BOTH dating methods. Looking closely and under bright light, I was able to make out a "B" over the numbers "73" on the rear frame. According to the email, it dates this saddle at February 1973. This took several attempts to capture using my cell phone camera, but its actually quite clear and unsmudged in person.
https://i127.photobucket.com/albums/p...1-Version2.jpg
Now for you puzzle solvers out there, the stamp on the leather is "L I C." I can figure a possible "3" from the "C", but how February or a 7 come from the "L" and "I", I haven't a clue.
https://i127.photobucket.com/albums/p...l/IMG_2682.jpg
Other photos of the saddle can be seen here:
Top: https://i127.photobucket.com/albums/p...l/IMG_2686.jpg
Bottom: https://i127.photobucket.com/albums/p...l/IMG_2685.jpg
Side: https://i127.photobucket.com/albums/p...l/IMG_2687.jpg
Rear badge: https://i127.photobucket.com/albums/p...l/IMG_2683.jpg
Post bracket: https://i127.photobucket.com/albums/p...0/IMG_2679.jpg
The saddle is in amazing shape for being 40 years old! The seller said it was from his fathers Paramount and that the saddle itself has been stored in a cloth bag, inside a shoebox, and in the closet for years. It has a few "character" scuffs, but the leather is not cracked at all. It has no sag or sit bone imprints in it. It seems to be broke in like a 5 year old saddle, but has patina far beyond that. The copper rivets look shinier in photos than they actually are. Some of them have a greenish patina that I was careful not to wipe off. I wiped it down with a terry cloth and gave it a coat of Lexol. It's beautiful - in my eyes. Soft, comfortable, and the smell reminds me off tack hanging in an old barn back home.
Anyone know what these vintage saddles in this condition sell for in today's market? Does the fact that the month and year are visibly dated add any value? What about the fact that it came off a Paramount? Do Paramount owners/builders seek original replacements in this kind of condition?
I planned on keeping it and putting it on my Soma Smoothie (century bike), but I'd be curious of what the estimated resale value is. I know only the just of Brooks saddles but nothing from the vintage era. This saddle was being ridden 15 years before I was conceived.
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Anyone know what these vintage saddles in this condition sell for in today's market? Does the fact that the month and year are visibly dated add any value? What about the fact that it came off a Paramount? Do Paramount owners/builders seek original replacements in this kind of condition?.
This is a $120 saddle:
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My Imperial is stamped with "DCO"....but the D seems to be stamped backwards for some reason.....or is it "OCD"....now it's kinda bugging me....is the "O" really a zero??...but it's way too round to be one, so where's the expected number??..... It must be "OCD".....must be.... must be....
Last edited by Chombi; 01-10-14 at 02:11 AM.
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While scouring Craigslist and feeBay for vintage Brooks for a couple projects of mine, it became apparent that the majority of Brooks B15 & B17 saddles I asked about had no date stamp at all. When they did, it was usually (but not always) a B followed by two numbers stamped on the rear of the bottom frame, near one of the curved ends. In a couple instances it was closer to the center of the rear frame. A number of experienced sellers were surprised to find the stamp when I told them to look in this location, as they were stamped pretty lightly. I've assumed the two numbers were the last two digits of the year of manufacture.The stamps seemed to get more common toward the end of the 70's. I've got a couple saddles that the provenance is fairly certain from the early 70's, with no date stamp at all.
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I don't know much but will add a few observations.
Cantle plate codes are a letter plus a two digit number. The lowest I've seen was A 59. I've seen A, B, and C but no other letters. I Presume the number refers to the year, but I have no confirmation the letter refers to the part of the year.
Leather codes, I don't know anything about them. But I can speculate.
What's the point of a code? This is not a rhetorical question. I would say the main reason for manufacturer codes of this kind is quality control. But the fact remains that a large proportion of cantle plates had no stamped code, even on saddles made in years when codes are known to exist.
Now if the codes on the leather and cantle plate both indicate a date, they only indicate the respective dates of the leather and the cantle plate, not of the saddle as a whole. They could vary by... I don't know how much. Years, for sure.
But I don't really see the point of a date on the leather. As far as quality control is concerned, the important data would be the source of the leather. The quality of a saddle is going to depend to a great degree on the quality of the leather, which will depend on any number of factors beyond Brooks' control. But one thing they can control is from whom they buy leather. I would assume the codes on the leather are there to connect the saddle to information in the records-- (now lost) records of purchases of leather from suppliers. If we had all those records, I presume we could learn some amazing stuff... the size of shipments of leather, the sources. We might even be able to determine that 1974 was a particularly good year for Argentinian leather, or something like that.
I, personally, am willing to live without this data.
Cantle plate codes are a letter plus a two digit number. The lowest I've seen was A 59. I've seen A, B, and C but no other letters. I Presume the number refers to the year, but I have no confirmation the letter refers to the part of the year.
Leather codes, I don't know anything about them. But I can speculate.
What's the point of a code? This is not a rhetorical question. I would say the main reason for manufacturer codes of this kind is quality control. But the fact remains that a large proportion of cantle plates had no stamped code, even on saddles made in years when codes are known to exist.
Now if the codes on the leather and cantle plate both indicate a date, they only indicate the respective dates of the leather and the cantle plate, not of the saddle as a whole. They could vary by... I don't know how much. Years, for sure.
But I don't really see the point of a date on the leather. As far as quality control is concerned, the important data would be the source of the leather. The quality of a saddle is going to depend to a great degree on the quality of the leather, which will depend on any number of factors beyond Brooks' control. But one thing they can control is from whom they buy leather. I would assume the codes on the leather are there to connect the saddle to information in the records-- (now lost) records of purchases of leather from suppliers. If we had all those records, I presume we could learn some amazing stuff... the size of shipments of leather, the sources. We might even be able to determine that 1974 was a particularly good year for Argentinian leather, or something like that.
I, personally, am willing to live without this data.
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Found this info on the Brooks facebook:
Brooks England Andy, Look underneath your saddle, there should be a code (ex. "0C9" = March 2009) Is there a code on yours?
August 25, 2011 at 9:27am
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The tiny stamping on the cantle plate of my Professional says "A 77" which would be reasonable timing for the saddle to have been manufactured in 1977, since it was purchased new by a friend in 1979 at our local, low volume LBS.
Just wanted to add that data point.
The leather is branded underneath QBR and off to the side of that, there is a 2 and what looks like a partially branded H.
The frame on a re-skinned vintage B17 I have doesn't seem to have any stampings anywhere, apart from "Made In England."
Just wanted to add that data point.
The leather is branded underneath QBR and off to the side of that, there is a 2 and what looks like a partially branded H.
The frame on a re-skinned vintage B17 I have doesn't seem to have any stampings anywhere, apart from "Made In England."
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www.vintage-trek.com/component_dates.htm#Brooks
I don't endorse the remark about TheHeadbadge.com, though.
I don't endorse the remark about TheHeadbadge.com, though.
#15
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www.vintage-trek.com/component_dates.htm#Brooks
I don't endorse the remark about TheHeadbadge.com, though.
I don't endorse the remark about TheHeadbadge.com, though.
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Lets wake up this zombie. TheHeadBadge data for Brooks Pros shows 2 different badges; v1 and v2. It says v2 lasted until at least late '79. I have 2 Pros, 1 small rivet and 1 large rivet that are stamped A 80 (first 1/4 1980?) that have the v2 badges so apparently they used that badge for a little longer.
I have some data points I could contribute, if you can get some momentum going....
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I also appreciate Kurt's efforts and I posted in an effort to expand the database. Keep 'em coming rhm, I love this kind of trivial minutia.
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I have a Brooks Professional from an English frame that has 'B8' on the metal part. Would this be 1968? I'm pretty sure the frame is a mid-late 70s build.
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A
68
That is, a letter (A, B, C, or D), centered over a two-digit number between 58 and 88.
Are your two letters in one line? Is the stamping clear, or hard to read?
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just to add a data point for Brooks Pro's... I've got a Pro that was on a '74 Raleigh International that I bought NIB back around the year 2000. I definitely got lucky!
The Brooks Pro is the type with small rivets, as seen in the Raleigh catalog of the day. The date code on the cantle plate is B73, and there is a code inked onto the leather with "L" above "HP".
top view
side view of the logo embossed into the skirt
a look at the badge on the rear. It lacks the "England" underneath the "Brooks" that is on my newer Brooks
the B73 date code on the cantle plate
the ink stamped code on the underside of the leather
Steve in Peoria
The Brooks Pro is the type with small rivets, as seen in the Raleigh catalog of the day. The date code on the cantle plate is B73, and there is a code inked onto the leather with "L" above "HP".
top view
side view of the logo embossed into the skirt
a look at the badge on the rear. It lacks the "England" underneath the "Brooks" that is on my newer Brooks
the B73 date code on the cantle plate
the ink stamped code on the underside of the leather
Steve in Peoria
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I do apologise I looked again and it's B 84. The 4 was hard to see at first. Mystery solved. Although didn't know they were making Professional models in the 80's.
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For me, I seek Brooks saddles with the vintage (two digit year) stamped into the metal frame. The newer models, those marked on the leather, do little to blow my kilt up. Though I have little proof, I feel that the quality of the leather stamped offerings are less, in the quality department, than the Old School metal stamped ones. Does anyone know when Brooks went from metal stamped information to leather dyed? Thanks.
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Brooks b66
I have a Brooks B66 that was bought new in the late spring 1978 in New Paltz, NY.
In the course of rehabbing it recently, I noticed it had a 3 character code 'O K 7' inscribed on the inside underside of the saddle top.
The first place I went to find out what the code might mean was vintage-trek.com. Alas, it appears that the Date Code key had been lost, according to a correspondent quoted there.
But I'm wondering...could the '7' be for the year 1977, then the 'K' for the month November?
Goodness knows what the first character--either an O or a zero, might mean...
Anyone have further anecdotal 411 to add?
In the course of rehabbing it recently, I noticed it had a 3 character code 'O K 7' inscribed on the inside underside of the saddle top.
The first place I went to find out what the code might mean was vintage-trek.com. Alas, it appears that the Date Code key had been lost, according to a correspondent quoted there.
But I'm wondering...could the '7' be for the year 1977, then the 'K' for the month November?
Goodness knows what the first character--either an O or a zero, might mean...
Anyone have further anecdotal 411 to add?