Class: Cars, Sedan — Model origin:
Vehicle used by a character or in a car chase
Author | Message |
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◊ 2008-03-30 00:59 |
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◊ 2008-03-30 05:49 |
1981-1984 |
◊ 2008-03-30 17:25 |
What's with the plate by the way? It's not a US or Canada plate, but I don't think these were sold anywhere else... |
◊ 2008-03-30 18:19 |
It looks like an old-type German plate with DIN characters, issued in Potsdam. I think if you have a short number, you get a short plate. (Deutsche Mitglieder: bitte Kommentar abgeben! ) |
◊ 2008-03-30 19:33 |
The car is imported from the US for sure, the plate is of the Germany. |
◊ 2008-03-30 19:40 |
Not exactly. If you have a car that does not supply enough space for a normal sized plate you are entitled to get a shorter plate. This also implies that you need a shorter code, i.e. instead of the usual two letters and three or four digits just one or two of each. Such short codes are only given to cars with special needs and motorbikes (they, too, have limited space). |
◊ 2008-03-30 21:02 |
Ah right ... I got it backside foremost, then. Danke schön für den Kommentar, Alex. btw ‘special needs’ auf englisch bedeutet geistig behindert … vielleicht haben deine Behörden amerikanische Autos nicht gern? |
◊ 2008-03-30 21:29 |
... just a pun on my behalf ... I sometimes take words by their literal meaning. But looking a the car's design ... well ... |
◊ 2008-05-12 21:18 |
@chris: with a short number-combination you don't always get a short plate. You can have the usual 52cm-plates, too - so our chancellor- and president's- and Bundestag-president's-cars have their 0-1, 0-2 and 1-1 always on 52cm-plates. But if you need a short combination, because our your "special needs" , like motorbikes, US-cars and so on, you can have problems to get one, because they are popular. Usually extreme short combinations (like B-A1 or D-J2 and so on) are restricted and the boss of the authority decides, if you have the need to get one. |
◊ 2008-05-12 21:21 |
It was surely a private import to Germany (mostly brought by an GI), because Plymouth was never officially sold in Germany, also not this car (K-car? I don't know these classifications), not even as a Chrysler. |
◊ 2022-01-02 05:29 |
Ep. 4.05 |