How did you determine that it's a 123? If it was built as a 123, it will have an engine serial number prefix of FCM, which indicates the 123s built for SuperCs and SuperA-1s. (Most regular Cs had this same prefix on a 113, as well). If original to your tractor, it will have either a prefix of FAA and a suffix of X7(for very early BNs, ser# 48350 and below) or a prefix of FABN for any higher number.
Either of those last two would indicate a motor that was built as a 113, with a 3" sleeve bore. A great many of those motors were later effectively made into 123s with the simple replacement with 3-1/8" sleeves, so if your determination that it's a 123 was made by measuring the bores . . . Depending on what you find for date casting codes on the rest of the tractor, I'd be guided (and maybe you already are and my question is moot!) by the serial number on the motor. If it has the right prefix and a serial number consistent with the date codes on the torque tube, transmission and final drives, there's a good chance it's the original motor, and the number will give you a more accurate idea of the date.
As far as the date codes, those on the chassis itself will often pre-date the actual assembly of the tractor by several months, and the various dated you find could cover a span of three to five months. My '47 BN, for example has some November dates with a P ('46) and some early Qs ('47) which would be consistent with the 1947 serial number. Dates, if any, on the front and rear wheels (not any wheels weights, which could have been added later) are often much closer to the actual production date.
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Today's Featured Article - Chores - by Frank Young. The ceaseless passing of time! It is at once our friend and our enemy. It measures our progress and it makes us old. Like most features of our life, few things are all good or all bad, and most such judgments depend on our own perspective or viewpoint. In our particular hobby, we enjoy the nostalgic return to the days of our youth as we recreate many of the scenes that took place on the family farm that served as the stage for the first few acts of the play that is our live
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