Not surprising there was no VIN tag on the prototype. Most prototypes, especially the ones built for display / evaluation purposes, never saw a road outside the company's display area or the proving grounds. So no VIN would be needed. As for being welded on, look very closely at any VIN tag. There are no signs of welds. For the 1960's tags, if you look at a tag that has fallen off, check the back side of the tag and the now-exposed part of the pillar. Something was applied to those areas. Also, when you place the tag back on, try and place it upside down. It won't fit right. As I say, those holes were punched when the tag was installed The tags of the early 1950's and prior were rivetted on. I dug out some tags I have collected over the years from junked vehicles and the one I got from a 1953 Dodge Mayfair sedan (D43-3) has indentations from rivets. It is also circular, by the way. Also, the tags were made of aluminum, not stainless steel. The only tags I have seen that were painted over were the data tags under the hood. The VIN tags, Canadian pre-1966 body tags, corporate division tags and Briggs body number tags were never painted and must have been placed on the car after painting. Bill Vancouver, BC ----- Original Message ----- From: "eastern sierra Adj Services" <esierraadj@xxxxxxxxx> To: <L-FORWARDLOOK@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Wednesday, January 28, 2004 11:36 PM Subject: [FWDLK] VINNY & the TAGS > There's a 'famous' 57 Dodge Royal (red/white) > in the factory literature, that features backwards-installed "shield" > emblems (which was NOT all that unusual; several prototype/advertising > cars had backwards-shields, INCLUDING Exner's own "Portrait-picture, > where he's posed, leaning over a 57 Dodge fin) , but that car is shown > with its driver's door opened,w/a lovely lass, sporting a full-length > leather coat, seated 1/2-in/on the driver's seat---but I digress--- > ANYWAY, the door hinge-pillar is clearly seen, and there's NO VIN plate > installed on that proto-car. > > I believe that the VIN plates were spot-welded > to the hinge pillars AFTER the cars were painted. > > I don't 'know' about pre-57 cars, but a painted-over VIN plate is a > dead-giveaway on late-50's cars that a cheapo/non-informed painter was > @ work. > > What's interesting is that the VIN plates were apparently designed for > (non-reversible?) screws or rivets, but that somebody decided, instead, > to weld them 'onto' the hinge pillars. > > Neil V. > > -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- Visit the ALL-NEW ForwardLook.net! New Discussion Forums, Expanded Content and much, much more http://www.forwardlook.net/
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