That might be the silliest thing I’ve seen on here. No. I take that back. It is.
As I stated earlier. It’s a Mopar, and the VIN clearly states what it is, original block or not. The gutter # shows it isn’t just a VIN affixed to a non original body. Idk… A rebody with a VIN on the block, or an original body with a different 440 block, that was the same as every other 440 block for the year. I think when hoovie got an “original” Hemi Superbird for $130g earlier this year, buyers felt the same way.
I'm not a newbie and during the years I've seen silliness gone to seed over how many angels can dance on the head of MOPAR wrist pin.
Endless debates.
And when the only original metal on the finished car is the roof.
Or the only original parts left contain the "numbers" but it's approved by the correct people.
As far as I know the only unique part on any car is the vin tag. (In the cars under consideration)
The only item that could not be reproduce. (Legally)
2. The engine gone just means the original motor is, well, gone....... The emphasis on the rear gutter lip stamp adds creditability that the car is NOT a rebodied car, i.e in this case, that it is a real Superbird. Now, Superbirds are unique in terms of the radiator core support number stamp.. Not all Superbirds had their radiator core supports stamped with the ID number that matches the gutter stamped ID....
Note that I said emphasis and not "importance" or "significance".
Curious.
Please pick one of these on the post 1968 Chrysler car you are hypothetically going to buy.
1. Original matching motor with a replaced left trunk gutter.
2. Non-original motor but with the original left trunk gutter.
No option "3" allowed.
(Do we transfer the number the new gutter? )
I've seen 1969 cars that didn't have the core support number and yet appeared original.
So, I've got my doubts that Superbirds have the that distinction without exception.
Others have found that IIRC.
Documented wrong year wheels on a car in Oregon rings a bell.
Or a legitimate yet mis-stamped engine block.
Rebody just seems a meaningless buzz word many times in 50 year old cars.
With money or the law involved. (Or ego?)
Understanding that there is the sentimental/emotional component to them.