Hi
All, and Roger,
I have
personalized plates on my '66 that I have had since 1994. I just renewed
them so they are good until May of '04. That will make them 10 years old,
and I have not been given any guff by the state. In Washington State the
plates go with the car, but if you have personalized plates like I do, you keep
the plates and can transfer them to the next one. I have had mine on each
of my Imperials, first the '63, then the '60, and now on my '66. Is the
law different for personalized plates?
Bill
Ulman
'66
Crown Conv. - "The youngest of all Imperials" per '66
brochure
License #: FIT4AQN
P.S.
And if anyone ever asks me, I respond "As a matter of fact, yes, I DO own the
road!"
Here in WA, and across the river in OR, one can register a plate to an
older car if it is "year of manufacture." I have two sets of YOM plates
and tabs, one on the '55 and one on the '66. Neither are the original
plates.
It seems a little odd to me, because, ie, eg, or whatever, a 1966 car
would have originally been sold with '67 tabs, but now you use the correct '66
YOM plates and tabs that the car couldn't have come with.
In both states, for many years you could keep the original plates and
just buy tabs. In OR, the renewable tabs started in 1955 with '56 tabs
and many "blue plates" with a number, letter, and four numbers were around for
years. In '64 OR went to three letters, three numbers blue plates.
However both states now require reflectorized plates for regular use, and
WA requires the plates be replaced every 7 years.
--Roger van Hoy, '55 DeSoto, '58 DeSoto, '42 DeSoto, '66 Plymouth, '81
Imperial, Washougal, WA
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