Plain Bob Reverse Canterbury Pleasure Pl Shipway Place Wainfleet Place       St Augustine Bob All Saints Place St James Bob Minster Place Chase Bob St Piran Place Brigstock Place
        Cippenham Place Camelion Bob Oake Place Quirister Bob Evening Star Place Morning Star Bob Cathedral Place Dirt Monkey Bob Slum Place Bradford-on-Tone Place
St Simon Bob St Nicholas Bob Westminster II Bob Maltby Bob Twineham Bob New Bob Eaglethorpe Bob                  
St Martin Bob Winchendon Place Blackburn Place Chevasse Bob Bampton Place Huntspill Bob Thurning Place                  
St Osmund Bob St Remigius Bob St Hilary Bob Callender Bob Fifield Bob St Vedast Bob Wigsthorpe Bob                  
Eynesbury Bob Huntley Place Dragon Place Montgomery-shire Place St Ouen Place Blaisdon Bob Armston Place                  
                     
    Variations Variations Variations Variations Variations Variations Variations Variations Variations Variations Variations   Variations Variations Variations  

Note that all these methods are reversals of methods in the first table (those with places made at the treble lead) - i.e. backwork becomes frontwork, and vice versa.

NB. Methods in the same column all have the same work above the treble (at the back), shown at the top of the column. Methods in the same row all have the same work below the treble (on the front), shown at the left of the row.

Note that four of the columns are for methods that have 145 made at the lead end, so the plain course may be a bobbed course of another method, which would not count as separate methods in peals. However, I think that Oake, Bradford-on-Tone, Slum and Chase are exceptions to this.

Follow the "Variations" links at the bottom of the relevant column for the calls for the methods above and their variations.

Click on the arrows to view a "family" of methods at a time