tvw wrote: ↑Wed Nov 16, 2022 11:42 am
I have been enjoying my coupe in the beginning of winter months while the 22 touring stays pretty in the shop, fun to have a T to play year around
The previous owner's father resurrected the coupe from "a pile of junk" around the 80's, said it was a '17 but when he redid the wood with home brew mesquite from his Texas ranch

he took the easy route and made the B pillar a non removable part of the body. When he went to register it in tx they said it was a '19 because of the body style and used the '20 motor serial number for the vin

. So I title it in Colorado and the trooper states it's a 20 because of the motor number. Realizing all the things that have been done to this car over the years and the lack of a real vehicle identification number I find the whole year thing amusing but I am curious what year this body really started out as, although I have no plans to re wood the car at this time, the mesquite is functional and solid, glass is all newer safety and rolls up and down nicely.
I am always puzzled by the statement in the Model T Encyclopedia and why it is ignored.
https://www.mtfca.com/encyclo/sernos.htm
"The engine number was also the serial number of the car. Engines were numbered when they were completed, and for the most part went into a chassis within a day or so. However, some engines were assembled and numbered at branch assembly plants. Highland Park would ship a block of engine-number records to an assembly plant and these engines might be made weeks or months afterwards. Consequently, engine numbers can only be used to date the "engine" NOT the car."
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Also the engine serial number was only unique with Ford during the Model T era. The current VIN identification system is unique encoding, including a serial number, used by the automotive industry to identify individual motor vehicles, towed vehicles, motorcycles, scooters and mopeds, as defined by the International Organization for Standardization. So it is a global id not just one within a State or Country. Knowing all this you can ask the Trooper what if that engine number exists, but for a different vehicle, like a 1927 Dodge Brothers (it was unique within Dodge)
Note 1927 model T engine number 15,076,231 is 8 positions and the Ford format, see below, only allows 6 while the International Format allows 8
The bottom line - newly assigned VIN numbers are "smart" encoded numbers that some knowledgeable user of VIN codes can determine the Make, Model, Year etc of a vehicle. For the rest of the World's population it is just a unique identifier that can be used to LOOK UP all the detailed information about that vehicle. So a VIN of 15076231 by itself (no picture or physical car to look at) doesn't mean its a 1927 Ford Model T, that info is in the database
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Here is a link to the current VIN formatting used by the Ford Motor Company
https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Vehicle_I ... /VIN_Codes
The past is a great place and I don't want to erase it or to regret it, but I don't want to be its prisoner either.
Mick Jagger