![]() |
Re: Rebodied cars and do they get certified
Bob .......How do the so called rebody shops treat the original vin? If its even there?
|
Re: Rebodied cars and do they get certified
[ QUOTE ]
The topic refers to a chevelle in this instance, therefore it would be replacing a rusted body with a rust free. I wouldn't worried about the new camaro body, it is my understanding they are easily identified. [/ QUOTE ] There is no "certifying " them. Replacing a rusted car's body with an entire new body and placing the old car's VIN on the new car is illegal under the Federal as well as state statutes. There is no exception for restoring a car of significant historical value (though I think there ought to be). This falls under the same auto theft/VIN swapping statutes and it is illegal. |
Re: Rebodied cars and do they get certified
Don't know Craig...
|
Re: Rebodied cars and do they get certified
[ QUOTE ]
The topic refers to a chevelle in this instance, therefore it would be replacing a rusted body with a rust free. I wouldn't worried about the new camaro body, it is my understanding they are easily identified. [/ QUOTE ] Steve, The opening statement was "COPO type car". I would believe that to mean any COPO including the Camaro. The new body's would fall in to the Camaro rebody scenerio. https://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/imag...ns/naughty.gif We now return to our regularly scheduled debate. Rick H. |
Re: Rebodied cars and do they get certified
(I opened this one up in a different thread since it started to take away from the COPO Chevelle that a member posted for sale.
Rick, That was what I was refering to... As far as the new bodies; they can't even reproduce a trim tag correctly. Do you think they could produce a whole new body that is undetectable. Especially with your critical eye?? https://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/imag...ns/shocked.gif |
Re: Rebodied cars and do they get certified
Jeff, what is your definition of a rebody? The hidden VINs don't match the VIN tag, or replacing so much sheet metal, little remains of the original car, but retaining the original cowl and the VIN's still match? How about a hypothetical former race car that had the firewall cut out including the hidden VINs, but the original trim and VIN tags remain and the rest of the car's sheet metal is original except for some patched 1/4 panels? Not an easy question to answer. I guess that is why survivor's can bring a premium.
|
Re: Rebodied cars and do they get certified
Steve,
Good point. https://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/imag...mlins/wink.gif As for the body's, I really don't think that the company that produces the bodies did it to intentionally deceive anyone. It's the individual that buys the body, makes a clone and attempts to pass off the completed car as an original car that is doing the deceiving. Believe me the differences between the repop bodies and original sheetmetal is such that any competent body shop can improve and make them correct. OK, now back to our regularly scheduled debate....again. https://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/imag...ns/naughty.gif Rick H. |
Re: Rebodied cars and do they get certified
I don't see what all the fuss is about. There are doctors in LA and Palm Beach who re-body people every day. A couple of Camaros shouldn't be such a big deal. Right???
wilma https://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/imag...ns/naughty.gif |
Re: Rebodied cars and do they get certified
It would be a big deal if I could purchase one of those people and found out my brand new Pam Anderson was once Aunt Bea (no offense to Aunt Bea).
|
Re: Rebodied cars and do they get certified
They get certified, then the certifier gets sued when the new owner buys the car based on the certification. It's happened at least twice in the last 5-6 months, and more will probably be coming out.
|
All times are GMT. The time now is 01:14 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.