Glad to help! I just wish I had taken more pictures back then, but to a young Marine of limited resources (I was making something like $4600
a year in 1979), film and developing were expensive.
So, sorry, no pictures of vile green cars. The green was quite similar to FS 24533, which is the interior colour of US armoured vehicles (that aren't white inside, thats the other interior colour
)
The only other 1028 picture I have is this one (below). It is typical in marking to other civilian coloured vehicles, even though it is a converted former tactical vehicle. It was, alas, in a junk yard when I found it.
A side note, the 54 at the beginning of the 6-digit ID number indicates a CUCV. Most, if not all, CUCVs in Marine service are 54####. The Marine 6-digit ID is always numeric, whereas the Army throw letters in there (they have more stuff, need a broader range of ID's).
The Air Force use a system where the first two numbers are the year the item was taken on inventory (usually the vehicle year model, but not necessarily), then a letter to indicate what type, K indicating tactical, then up to five numbers (but usually four) which are the actual sequence the item was placed on inventory. An example- 96K0657 would translate as the 657th tactical vehicle taken onto the Air Force inventory in 1996.
Attached below are a typical Government plate serving the Marines (the MC on the plate stands for Marine Corps), and a generic later GSA plate, which is similar to what most of the sedans would have.
Cheers