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On some deuces it is easy. My '69 Kaiser/Jeep has an identification number on the data plate that starts: 04M-57869-XXX-XXXXXSearched some old threads from 2006 and so forth, still didn't find much, anyway to determine year of truck?
True, but that only works for trucks built between the mid '60s untill '72. In '72 they changed the numbering system and the year is no longer included in it.On some deuces it is easy. My '69 Kaiser/Jeep has an identification number on the data plate that starts: 04M-57869-XXX-XXXXX
The manufacture date is the last 3 digits of the 57869 number, and is 1969.
-Chuck
Mine has another separate space for the contract number. It is dated one year earlier than the date that is part of my VIN. In my case the contract number is DAAE-06-68-C-0007. I'm inclined to believe that the number that is part of the VIN is the actual build date. That is what I was told, anyway.As another example, my VIN is 04K-31171, or 1971 as the contract year, not necessarily the year in which it was produced. Some contracts were not fulfilled during their calendar year, allowing some vehicles to be in production the next year. I don't think you can get any closer to the production year than the numbers in your VIN. Close enough for registration purposes.
My bad. I confused VIN and registration.Others,
A registration number is not a VIN nor any part of the VIN. Folks are getting steered into thinking this with the end result being they will title and register their vehicles wrong.
Hi Carnac,
On my '69 Kaiser/Jeep deuce, the "Identification Number" is a 17 digit number composed of the registration number, and the serial number. I am certain that the entire 17 digit number is the correct number to give as the VIN.
What would not be correct is to give the 9 digit registration number that is the first half of the VIN. That number is not unique to any one vehicle, but rather tells information on the manufacturer, date of manufacture, and who knows what else....
Nor would it be correct to just give the 8 digit serial number, as VIN's are supposed to identify certain manufacturer information, as well as the serial number.
-Chuck
You would lose, my SF97 has the whole 17 digit number, exactly as it appears on the ID plate.You should trust CARNAC on this one Chuck, he knows what he's talking about. If you got your deuce from GL, I'm willing to bet money that when you get your SF-97 back, it's only going to have the 9 digit SN on the form...if you get a FL title it will be the same way. Mine was, and I had a heck of a time convincing the DMV that the military does it differently than civi cars and trucks...they insisted on copying the whole 17 digit number down when they did the out of state inspection on my truck, and that made matters even worse when it came time to title it in Ohio. Because the FL title didn't match the out of state inspection.
Adding that registration to the VIN would be like adding the tag number to the VIN on your car. You can put just about anything on the SF97 request and get back an SF97 with the numbers you chose. As far as law enforcement would be concerned it's only the numbers assigned by the factory, not numbers assigned by the DOD. As a former member of an auto theft task force, the frame number is the end all number assigned to the vehicle by the manufacturer.You would lose, my SF97 has the whole 17 digit number, exactly as it appears on the ID plate.
If you remember, when you filled out the SF97 request, one of the fields you filled in was the VIN. That is the number that will appear everywhere on your SF97, and FLA title reassignment form.
-Chuck
I have seen frame numbers stamped on commercial trucks, of the same vintage, that are just the serial number portion of the VIN.... [Commercial 17 digit VIN's are in two parts. The first 2/3's identifies the manufacturer, the engine, body style, brakes, weight, etc. And the last 6 digits are a sequential serial number for the vehicle.]Adding that registration to the VIN would be like adding the tag number to the VIN on your car. You can put just about anything on the SF97 request and get back an SF97 with the numbers you chose. As far as law enforcement would be concerned it's only the numbers assigned by the factory, not numbers assigned by the DOD. As a former member of an auto theft task force, the frame number is the end all number assigned to the vehicle by the manufacturer.
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