Here's a few more shots:[IMG]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v318/sonorjedi/IMAG0289.jpg[/IMG][IMG]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v318/sonorjedi/IMAG0291.jpg[/IMG][IMG]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v318/sonorjedi/IMAG0288.jpg[/IMG]Thanks again for the dating, if you're ever in the Akron, OH area come over and check out the sound!!! I promise i'll move it out of my 16 year old's bedroom, hahahaGary.
Man that is a beautiful thing to behold from either side, but reverse side shots are my favorites. Based on what I see here if I had to order the middle two trans stamp types based on manufacturing characteristcs alone, I would opt to call yours the type II, which was I had already suspected but never had much good evidence to back up.
As seen from the backside view, if you'll notice that region that lacks hammering as an indicator. After seeing thjis on enough old A's, I named this band: the "zone of avoidance". It occurs in most old A's from the type I trans stamp era and all the way back to the 1930's. This is commonly seen in type I trans stamps, and seeing as how manufacturing characteristcs don't abruptly change from era to the next, earlier characteristics tend to "bleed over from one era to the next with earlier type traits often seen in earlier examples of the next era. Seeing this type I trans stamp characteristics in your cymbal is a good example of this.
I'm If I ever head towards Akron sometime, I'll let you know. I'd love to check it out in person. How did you come by this one?