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- Perforation_gauge abstract "In philatelic terminology, perforation gauge has two meanings: As a term for classification. The \"perforation gauge\" of a stamp specifies the number of perforation holes that appear in a two-centimeter span along its edge. The finest gauge ever used is 18 on stamps of the Malay States in the early 1950s, and the coarsest is 2, seen on the 1891 stamps of Bhopal. Modern stamp perforations tend to range from 11 to 14. Many stamps are produced with \"compound perforations\" i. e., the vertical and horizontal perforations will be of different gauges. Many U. S. stamps have been perforated 10½ x 11. As the name for a philatelic tool used to measure perforations. Invented in 1866 by Jacques Legrand, the typical \"perf gauge\" (sometimes called an odontometer) is a metal or plastic tile on which perforations of gauges ranging from 7 and 7½ to 16 and 16½ are pictured (the pictures sometimes appear at the edges of the tile). The philatelist places each of these depictions beside a stamp until one is found that exactly matches the stamp’s perforations. Such a gauge is an indispensable tool for identifying stamps that present identical images but have been issued with perforations of several different sizes. An extreme example is the U. S. Washington-Franklin Issues, some of which are found with perforations of gauges 8½, 10, 11, 12, and 12½.↑ 1.0 1.1 ↑ ↑".
- Perforation_gauge thumbnail Perforations_US1940_issues-2c.jpg?width=300.
- Perforation_gauge wikiPageID "40844014".
- Perforation_gauge wikiPageLength "2562".
- Perforation_gauge wikiPageOutDegree "7".
- Perforation_gauge wikiPageRevisionID "661514197".
- Perforation_gauge wikiPageWikiLink American_Philatelic_Society.
- Perforation_gauge wikiPageWikiLink Category:Philatelic_terminology.
- Perforation_gauge wikiPageWikiLink Category:Stamp_collecting.
- Perforation_gauge wikiPageWikiLink Jacques_Legrand_(philatelist).
- Perforation_gauge wikiPageWikiLink Postage_stamp_separation.
- Perforation_gauge wikiPageWikiLink Washington-Franklin_Issues.
- Perforation_gauge wikiPageWikiLink File:Perforations_US1940_issues-2c.jpg.
- Perforation_gauge wikiPageWikiLinkText "Perforation gauge".
- Perforation_gauge wikiPageWikiLinkText "perforation gauge".
- Perforation_gauge wikiPageWikiLinkText "perforation".
- Perforation_gauge wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Commons_category.
- Perforation_gauge wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Perforation_gauge subject Category:Philatelic_terminology.
- Perforation_gauge subject Category:Stamp_collecting.
- Perforation_gauge comment "In philatelic terminology, perforation gauge has two meanings: As a term for classification. The \"perforation gauge\" of a stamp specifies the number of perforation holes that appear in a two-centimeter span along its edge. The finest gauge ever used is 18 on stamps of the Malay States in the early 1950s, and the coarsest is 2, seen on the 1891 stamps of Bhopal. Modern stamp perforations tend to range from 11 to 14. Many stamps are produced with \"compound perforations\" i.".
- Perforation_gauge label "Perforation gauge".
- Perforation_gauge sameAs Q247300.
- Perforation_gauge sameAs Zähnungsschlüssel.
- Perforation_gauge sameAs Odontómetro.
- Perforation_gauge sameAs Odontomètre.
- Perforation_gauge sameAs Fogazatmérő.
- Perforation_gauge sameAs Odontometro.
- Perforation_gauge sameAs Tandingmeter.
- Perforation_gauge sameAs Ząbkomierz.
- Perforation_gauge sameAs m.0yp01rc.
- Perforation_gauge sameAs Зубцемер.
- Perforation_gauge sameAs Зубцемір.
- Perforation_gauge sameAs Q247300.
- Perforation_gauge wasDerivedFrom Perforation_gauge?oldid=661514197.
- Perforation_gauge depiction Perforations_US1940_issues-2c.jpg.
- Perforation_gauge isPrimaryTopicOf Perforation_gauge.