A prediction by Andrew Crommelin (Royal Observatory, Greenwich, England) for 1921 was considered unfavourable and no observations were made. The comet was recovered in 1926.[3] Searches in 1932 and 1937 were unsuccessful.[2]
Consequently, this comet has remained a lost comet since 1927. As of 2019[update] and using the JPL Horizons nominal orbit, the comet is still expected to come to perihelion around 1.3 AU from the Sun.