Except that it's the other way around. They're claiming that something that the debut of the three speed automatic tranny was 57 when actually it was 56. Ditto the unibody. >They >do need to get on der schtick and keepen de facts der straighten. Yup. -----Original Message----- From: Larry C. Stanley <peerless@xxxxxxxxxxx> To: L-FORWARDLOOK@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <L-FORWARDLOOK@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Date: Saturday, November 21, 1998 12:03 PM Subject: [FWDLK] Re Chrysler Historical >All, > >Another thing to remember is that in Europe the model year of a car was >determined by the serial number and not always by the year of manufacture. >Also, the year of a car is determined if it was made before or after >January 1. (We had a 1950 MGTD, but the title called it a 1951 because it >was made in November!) The Europen manufacturers often did not change the >cars or serial nombers from one year to the next. Techinical changes were >an on going thing, but styling changed little. (Kinda like Henry Ford.) A >good example of this is the VW. Around 1966, VW began to use September as >the new model year and quit using the sequencial serial numbers they used >from year one. > >Maybe the new historian is having trouble remembering that American cars >used September as a new model year in the same years they did not. That >would make an option on the 1958 year look like it was a 1957 to them. They >do need to get on der schtick and keepen de facts der straighten. > >Larry Stanley |