By that logic then the HK designation was first released in 1965, making 2015 the 50th anniversary of the HK.
The 14th is the date that the Monaro name was released to the public through the Sydney Morning Herald NOT the 17th through the Melbourne age.
Does the release of the name make the "birthday"? We told everyone that if our first born was a boy his name would be Alex 3 months before he was born, so name day to me has nothing to do with "birthday".
As you say though a cars "birthday" can be any number of days. Any of the following could be construed as the "Birth of the car": (consider the first Holden)
1) the day the management decide they are gong to go ahead with the project
2) when the car is designed
3) when the car is named
4) when the first clay is completed
5) when the first prototype is completed
6) when the first car is mass produced
7) when someone inside/outside the organisation passes info to the press and they "leak" the information
8) when the car is OFFICIALLY released
9) when the car goes on sale
For 99.9% of the people the Birthday of the first Holden is the 28th of November 1948, making number 8 the popular choice. I do not think many would see 3 as the most significant, but have been wrong before.
March 22 is when the engineering update was sent out, the name would have been decided on in late February and all departments, that needed to be informed, would have been well before 22/3. These would have been production so that badges could be designed and made, public relations so that brochures could be adjusted etc etc. None of these people would need to rely on the engineering department to complete their work. A great example is engineering update 9/8/68 it has "radius rods added for 81837 model". But we know that the cars at release had them so this shows that the engineering update dates are NOT the time that everyone is first informed.
Edited by user Saturday, 24 March 2018 10:58:17 AM(UTC)
| Reason: Not specified