Not trying to muddy the waters but...
Very confusing as far as HK's go, I'm just a dumb old pensioner so please bear with me, lol.
I will use the numbers off my car as an example.
The firewall stamp is on the body but it is actually the chassis number and it is applied at the factory which made that body. eg, HK0471#B (no second B) which means that it is the 471#th HK body MADE at Brisbane. Nothing to say that it could not have ended up on a Perth car for example.
When it went down the production line at Brisbane the body (big) tag was fitted and the plant sequence number eg, HK569A-0359#B becomes the body number. Which makes it the 359#th HK ASSEMBLED at Brisbane. Confused yet? Hang on that's 1114 numbers different? Don't reckon they'd want to store a thousand bodies out in the backyard.
The skinny tag is installed at the same time as the big tag and it is 80569KH10504#. Which makes it the 504#st GMH vehicle of all types built at Brisbane since 1/1/1968.
You want more confusion? I have had the area around my firewall stamp back to bare metal and the second B was never stamped on it, so it must have missed the train and ended up on a Brisbane car.
So now we have 3 different numbers to identify that vehicle, no wonder I'm confused and now you want to call one of those numbers a VIN number, I thought that the term "VIN number" did not exist before 1/1/1970.
To top it all off the tags were stamped differently from one factory to another, so I can readily see why for HK's the firewall stamp is the only true identifier.
Edited by user Thursday, 9 June 2011 8:35:24 PM(UTC)
| Reason: Not specified