Anyone able to identify this ……
Discussion
Thanks a lot guys most grateful I’ve just looked at one of the sites you’ve suggested and apparently it’s a generic instrument from many WW2 RAF types Lancaster Mosquito Spitfire and so on…..I shall contact the company at Ferndown and see if they can throw any light on the markings…. will report back 

eharding said:
normalbloke said:
hucumber said:
Given that it says Port and Starboard I would say its most likely from a boat
Aircraft.
That said, the boat Clarkson had on the grand tour could stop pretty quick, quicker than an aircraft. Unless you crash of course
hucumber said:
Given that it says Port and Starboard I would say its most likely from a boat
Boats don't have brakes!The sticker has an address in Dorset for some reason. Ah bingo: http://www.marilake.co.uk/
Big Rat said:
Recently moved house and going through old boxes on shelves found this…..
Anybody through any light the age guessing it’s aircraft related …..possibly military…..

6685 Pressure, Temperature, and Humidity Measuring and Controlling Instruments Includes Thermometers, including Engine Thermometers; Pressure Gages; Thermocouple Leads; Resistance Bulbs. Excludes Clinical Therometers; (FSC 6515); Thermostatic and Differential Pressure Switches (FSC 5930); and Meteorological Instruments (FSC 6660).Anybody through any light the age guessing it’s aircraft related …..possibly military…..
99 Procurement country code. 99 is UK.
633 7752 Simply the unique number assigned to the item within the 6685 NATO (or Federal, as in FSC) Supply Classification group.
The 6A bit in front of the NSN? Not sure about what it specifically means, but it usually denotes which specific part of an arm or service originally contracted for the item, or what it's application is. Not sure what 6A is applicable to though. And that's probably the key part of the whole number for the information you want.
Getting the full NSN correct is vital or you could end up getting something completely different to what you thought you were ordering. Like the time I tried to order a replacement 'Emergency Stop' button for a BR90 Bridging lorry and ended up getting a snot-o-gram from some RAF Squadron Leader demanding to know why I'd ordered a compressor blade for a Rolls Royce Spey jet engine. It turned out that the codification people at Bicester had got a couple of those first four numbers in the wrong order and caused a fair bit of upset and chaos. The Sqn Ldr had got his nose out of joint, and we suffered a delay in getting our bridge building truck back into serviceable condition while the twits at Bicester sorted their s
t out.A few years ago I could have run an inquiry through the MOD stores system, or looked that prefix code up in a big old ledger, but I no longer have access to that sort of info.
Simpo Two said:
Boats don't have brakes!The sticker has an address in Dorset for some reason. Ah bingo: http://www.marilake.co.uk/
Yertis said:
Simpo Two said:
Boats don't have brakes!The sticker has an address in Dorset for some reason. Ah bingo: http://www.marilake.co.uk/

MB140 said:
I’m in work on Wednesday, I have to pop in to stores for some uniform. If I remember and the guys have time I will ask someone in SCAS to look it up and see what the system says.
I used a quick online NSN decoder but doesn’t tell you any more than you already know

Appreciate that ……don’t you just love a bit of detective work I used a quick online NSN decoder but doesn’t tell you any more than you already know

interstellar said:
69 is corfe Mullen for sure so that’s correct. Weirdly I lived in corfe Mullen until four years ago so I know wareham road well, even more weird is I now live in Ferndown 
I used to get mocked by the local punks while waiting outside the Dorset Soldier for a lift to the Air Cadets in Wimborne 
The chip shop up towards Springdale Road was excellent. yellowjack said:
Big Rat said:
Recently moved house and going through old boxes on shelves found this…..
Anybody through any light the age guessing it’s aircraft related …..possibly military…..

6685 Pressure, Temperature, and Humidity Measuring and Controlling Instruments Includes Thermometers, including Engine Thermometers; Pressure Gages; Thermocouple Leads; Resistance Bulbs. Excludes Clinical Therometers; (FSC 6515); Thermostatic and Differential Pressure Switches (FSC 5930); and Meteorological Instruments (FSC 6660).Anybody through any light the age guessing it’s aircraft related …..possibly military…..
99 Procurement country code. 99 is UK.
633 7752 Simply the unique number assigned to the item within the 6685 NATO (or Federal, as in FSC) Supply Classification group.
The 6A bit in front of the NSN? Not sure about what it specifically means, but it usually denotes which specific part of an arm or service originally contracted for the item, or what it's application is. Not sure what 6A is applicable to though. And that's probably the key part of the whole number for the information you want.
Getting the full NSN correct is vital or you could end up getting something completely different to what you thought you were ordering. Like the time I tried to order a replacement 'Emergency Stop' button for a BR90 Bridging lorry and ended up getting a snot-o-gram from some RAF Squadron Leader demanding to know why I'd ordered a compressor blade for a Rolls Royce Spey jet engine. It turned out that the codification people at Bicester had got a couple of those first four numbers in the wrong order and caused a fair bit of upset and chaos. The Sqn Ldr had got his nose out of joint, and we suffered a delay in getting our bridge building truck back into serviceable condition while the twits at Bicester sorted their s
t out.A few years ago I could have run an inquiry through the MOD stores system, or looked that prefix code up in a big old ledger, but I no longer have access to that sort of info.
I..e 26AH parts are for an Apache, anthyhing that is 1D is a hand tool.
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