Quote:
Originally Posted by Jonesy
I would say the opposite. It would not be common on a real car to change out the cowl tag. Like in this instance where they kept the old one.
Most get put on to either make a car what it isnt or because it was missing in the first place.
Those driveline stampings look legit. I would say that hes lucky he found that original cowl tag.
Body number is the same on both. I would like to see the pad stamping bare, but initial thought is that its good.
I think that original cowl tag was on that car. What would be nice is to find a pic of it attached to the car pre restoration.
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I say that because that's what happened on my Z, restored about 20 years ago. The restoring owner wanted to change to deluxe interior so changed the tag to match (and also said he didn't want a beat-up tag on a fresh restoration). When Jerry M reviewed the car in 2019, he said: "Years ago, many changed trim tags so they could change the color of the car. Not today, many times it's done to turn a base V-8 Camaro into a Z28. As we know this is not good for the hobby."
There were different practices in the hobby 20 years ago that have thankfully changed (like the term "numbers-matching" that should really be retired for good, from back when you lost points if you didn't restamp your replacement block!).