The Supercar Registry

The Supercar Registry (https://www.yenko.net/forum/index.php)
-   Technical & Restoration (https://www.yenko.net/forum/forumdisplay.php?f=86)
-   -   Selling Trim Tags ????? (https://www.yenko.net/forum/showthread.php?t=83601)

Racefan 11-01-2005 06:42 PM

Re: Selling Trim Tags ?????
 
[ QUOTE ]
So let me se if I have this straight. I just found a 69 L78 that has been in storage for 20 years and is in excellent shape except of one area. The dash has rotted out because of the moisture that sits on them.

Show of hands that can relate to this scenerio.

Now I have to pass on the car because I can not legally remove the VIN tag, replace the dash panel and then reattach the VIN tag to the replacement panel? Technically the new dash is not original to the car.

Am I reading some of these responses correctly that once the VIN is attached to the car it may never come off the original metal it was attached?

Where do you draw the line on this??


Rick H.

[/ QUOTE ]

Difference is, did the tage get replaced into the original car again with matching hidden VINs? The I'd say you are safe. But, what if you decided to not pursue redoing your car that you found and bought a decent Plain Jane and moved all of your equipment to it (including tags)--that is what I'm talking about. However, you are probably going to get some criticism and questions about the legitimacy of the car with the non-correct rivets holding the tags in. All I am saying is that there is NO GOOD REASON to purchase or sell trim/VIN tags UNLESS you happen to find the person who owns the correct shell those tags should be in. And, chances are, if they were taken out at some point the car probably isn't even around anymore.

PeteLeathersac 11-01-2005 07:17 PM

Re: Selling Trim Tags ?????
 
Remember in the Ferrari crowd when the 250 Gto's were first hot, a guy had a real Gto, bought a regular 250, faked it as a Gto and included the tags off his own real car, sold the fake and kept the real car to drive with regular 250 tags? . Using this same logic, a well known and documented Chevy that no one questions as genuine in all ways could be bought and another car slipped under the tags....the job is so perfect and the car previously so well documented that no one ever suspects or looks at the facts again....the car is sold and the crook cruises in his genuine car telling all it's a clone with a big smile on his face? . Sounds crazy....kind of a reverse engineered clone....but possible?
On jumping tags around, whatever federal or varying laws by State or Provinces say, accepted rules of thumb by enthusists like the group here can be practised and the fraud people will be against these ideas making them easy to spot in the crowd? ~ Pete

Rick H 11-01-2005 09:56 PM

Re: Selling Trim Tags ?????
 
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
So let me se if I have this straight. I just found a 69 L78 that has been in storage for 20 years and is in excellent shape except of one area. The dash has rotted out because of the moisture that sits on them.

Show of hands that can relate to this scenerio.

Now I have to pass on the car because I can not legally remove the VIN tag, replace the dash panel and then reattach the VIN tag to the replacement panel? Technically the new dash is not original to the car.

Am I reading some of these responses correctly that once the VIN is attached to the car it may never come off the original metal it was attached?

Where do you draw the line on this??


Rick H.

[/ QUOTE ]

Difference is, did the tage get replaced into the original car again with matching hidden VINs? The I'd say you are safe. But, what if you decided to not pursue redoing your car that you found and bought a decent Plain Jane and moved all of your equipment to it (including tags)--that is what I'm talking about. However, you are probably going to get some criticism and questions about the legitimacy of the car with the non-correct rivets holding the tags in. All I am saying is that there is NO GOOD REASON to purchase or sell trim/VIN tags UNLESS you happen to find the person who owns the correct shell those tags should be in. And, chances are, if they were taken out at some point the car probably isn't even around anymore.

[/ QUOTE ]

Please reread what I wrote. All I said that was wrong was a rusted dash panel. Nothing more. I never said anything about adding a different tag to make the car what it is not as Sam illustrates above. Just replacing the dash panel nothing more.

Rick H

Racefan 11-01-2005 11:51 PM

Re: Selling Trim Tags ?????
 
Please re-read what I wrote. I understood your question and point. In my opinion, you would be in the clear because your hidden VIN would match the VIN on the tag you moved. All I said about your swapping the VIN tag to the new dash panel was that you would probably get some questions for it not having the correct rivets, etc. But, they could easily be cleared up by showing the hidden VIN.

RichSchmidt 11-02-2005 05:48 AM

Re: Selling Trim Tags ?????
 
I think he might be implying that the rusted dash was actually a rusted cowl box which is where the most well known hidden vin is located.They reproduce this part,but it doesnt have a VIN stamped in it,so the car techically looses it's hidden VIN.I know my 73 'bird has the last 6 digits stamped on the drivers side end of the subframe,but I know that I mutilated mine when I welded in my frame connectors thus removing the evidence of the subframe swap.

As for that XXXX56 car that is being mentioned,you should know that in most states,any time a VIN is tampered with,the car in question is issued a new VIN,and the new one will look nothing like the old OEM VIN.They do this when they actually find cars that turn up tagged,but are in functional condition and can be auctioned or returned to their rightfull owner.If the owner of car XXXX56 really wanted to push the issue,he could press charges against the owner of the tagged car,and the owner would have to submit the car for investigation at which time a questionable hidden vin would reveal the truth,and the bogus car could be taken out of circulation by the government,and the own would loose the car,and it would be issue a new state VIN and sold at an auction.The bad part is that the bogus car might get to keep the cowl tag unless the legit owner can prove otherwise.Another issue is that the owner of the buried car better make it pretty spiffy looking before he calls in the state since otherwise they might object to even dealing with the car as anything other then junk.



I do have one more scenerio that always raises a few eyebrows when I mention it.With supercar prices being what they are,and with such good documentation of the whereabouts of so many of the remaining cars,the last of the survivous are crawling out of the woodwork and what we see isnt pretty.We are seeing drastic measures being used to rehabilitate tube chassis race cars back into stock floorpan restorations,and even rusted and crushed hulks are being dragged out of the cornfields and being reborn with both NOS and repop parts,but the actual amount of surviving supercar sheetmetal that is unaccounted for is getting pretty slim.Now my question is,how does what we are doing effect the mental outlook of our hobby?When somebody sees a nicely restored car,they sit in it,and feel like they are holding the same steering wheel and staring out the same windshiled as somebody did 35 years ago as they banged gears for the first time in their new supercar.What they are actually doing is sitting in a very nice recreation of such a car.With an entire repop or NOS interior,and sheet metal,and almost no visable original parts,they arent getting the "feel" of a true 35 year old survivor.Now the fact is that there isnt a real shortage of very clean 69 camaro original bodies{Or other muselce car bodies},but there is a shortage of clean bodies that came with COPO numbers on their cowl tags.As such,what is a more real driving experiance?I can sit in an overly restored supercar and appreciate the work that went into it,but the fact is that if I knew that the car was made up of 80% replacment parts,I wouldnt get a very good feeling out of it.Now if somebody built a tag job car using a mint original survivor base model body with all the running gear and tags from a supercar,and then made the required trim upgrades with either the old parts from the supercar,or other real production car parts,even if the interior panels were a bit dull and scratched,and the windsheild had wiper marks on it,wouldnt it offer a more true feeling of being in the real experiance?Isnt this what restoring an old car is all about?When you stop restoring and start replacing with new and reproduction parts is there eventually a point when you cant call it a restoration,but rather a recreation?Everyone is so quick to jump on the case of some guy who swaps out tags,but they themselves would think nothing of taking a destroyed legit car and putting so much work into saving the"original" body,that when they got done they only real vintage part on the entire body were the tags and some sheet metal clippings here and there between all the new panels they hung on the car.Who is really the lesser villian,the guy who replaces he entire rusted body with a mint correctly dated original base model body,or the guy who recreates his destroyed original out of a bunch of Chinese parts,or incorrectly dated parts or parts from 10 different cars and 20 pounds of welding wire holding them all together?The line between the good guys and the bad guys gets fuzzy sometimes.

WILMASBOYL78 11-02-2005 06:05 AM

Re: Selling Trim Tags ?????
 
That story gives you a better appreciation for the true original cars!!!!!

wilma https://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/imag...mlins/flag.gif

Racefan 11-02-2005 06:11 AM

Re: Selling Trim Tags ?????
 
Another dumb question. In 1969, when a person pulled his new Yenko off the lot did it normally have dull and scratched interior parts or the windshield have wiper marks on it? When a starter went out, did he automatically take it to the Chevy garage and get it replaced with genuine AC/Delco parts? Nope, he probably went to the corner parts house and replaced it with whatever they carried. And he didn't worry about where it was made. Also, when an engine compartment was detailed, do you think they left the markings on the firewall? Nope, they were something that needed cleaned off. I don't know what my point is, or if I have a point. All I know is that there are cars out there who are marginally correct and there are those who know about them. Why are they not "outed"? If I were to looking to potentially purchase xxxx56 and knew nothing about all this, would someone send me a PM letting me know I may be making a mistake? THAT is what I want to know.

Mr70 11-02-2005 06:17 AM

Re: Selling Trim Tags ?????
 
Submit a Bid on it & find out.

WILMASBOYL78 11-02-2005 06:42 AM

Re: Selling Trim Tags ?????
 
[ QUOTE ]
There really is no discussion. Its fraud, Period. How about this, Find a nice 1967, 327 engined convertible camaro, put on a new 4K tag found or made wherever, Plop in a L78 and all the nice big block stuff, now take the car to a non title state and register it and insure it as a SS , now sell it to a title state and the car is now transformed with documents...legal?

[/ QUOTE ]


Sam, that's some system! I have heard of laundering money, but that's "car laundering". This hobby is headed for a reckoning!!

wilma https://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/imag...ns/scholar.gif

Rick H 11-02-2005 06:42 AM

Re: Selling Trim Tags ?????
 
[ QUOTE ]
I think he might be implying that the rusted dash was actually a rusted cowl box which is where the most well known hidden vin is located.

[/ QUOTE ]

Oh boy, https://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/imag...s/rolleyes.gif............ I look at these cars everyday and I know the difference between a dash panel and a cowl panel.
I am refering to the dash panel where the VIN tag is riveted NOT the cowl panel where the partial VIN's are located.

Doesn't matter anyway because if someone wants to restore his car, it's his car and he can go the route he wants.

Rick H.


All times are GMT. The time now is 05:56 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.


O Garage vBulletin Plugins by Drive Thru Online, Inc.