--- Richard Woodside <rwoodside@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > Jarno has come across one of the hazards of using > non-factory original sources of information about > our old cars. > > He wrote: "Secondly some literature tells about > paint codes that letter Y means Cocoa metallic > on year 1960 and letter U doesn't exist, but my > car has code UU1 and it has had this color on it." > > The Catalog of American Car ID Numbers 1960-69 > contains the misinformation above, along with a > notation that no trim codes are available for > 1960 Dodge. Obviously, trim codes did exist; > it's just that the Catalog compilers didn't have > access to that information. > > But, American Automobile Paint Code Interchange > Manual 1945-1995 indicates that paint code UU1 is > Cocoa Poly, and that UU is the code for Cocoa Poly, > while 1 is the code for single tone. So, Jarno's > car departed the factory in a single tone Cocoa > metallic paint. The PPG (Ditzler) formula number > for Jarno's Cocoa Poly is 50543, by the way. > > For 1960 Dodge, there was no YY paint code. But in > 1959 Dodge, YY was used for Canary Diamond, while > in 1961, YY represented Buckskin. > > It's too bad that the factory service manuals don't > have this info in them, since they're a lot easier > to get than the factory paint and trim data books. (snip) AMC/Rambler shop manuals do list this, at least those few I've seen, including paint codes for Ditzler and other paint vendors. Never understood why nobody else's shop manuals did this. ===== Mike Sealey, San Francisco CA '57 Plymouth Sport Suburban __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Yahoo! Mail - Free email you can access from anywhere! http://mail.yahoo.com/ |