The one near the starter is very hard to get to...especially if there is any grease or dirt in the area. And if the motor has been changed in the last 50 years, the number there will be worthless.
Posted the firewall photo. I looked a little and could see no signs of tampering.The engine is basically meaningless at this point.
Find, clean and photograph the VIN on the firewall.
Posted the firewall photo. I looked a little and could see no signs of tampering.
I will but car pics in the restoration section...
Thanks again
Adam
Great adviceHi Adam,
IMO it ultimately doesn’t really matter what is going on with the VIN. You have the car. It is registered as a CS. It isn’t restored, it’s rusty. Nobody is trying to trick anyone, unless you paid a small fortune foe
the car. Just be careful investing a ton of money into it, because you can’t escape your VIN conundrum.
The VIN is tied to a sedan, and this information is an obtainable fact (see below!
All e9 vins are documented and they started with a 2 or a 4. Likewise, a huge chunk of e3 ‘s started with a 3
e3 VIN list:
BMW E3 Limousinen Club e.V. - BMW E3 - Technik - Fahrgestellnummern
BMW E3. Diese offizielle Internetseite des BMW E3 Club e.V. informiert über die Aktivitäten des Vereins, die Geschichte des Fahrzeugs, aktuelle Termine, Kaufberatung und Technik des Limousinenklassikers.web.archive.org
Here is 3105537:
1973 BMW Bavaria 3.0 S
View the 1973 BMW Bavaria 3.0 S at Gooding & Company's Amelia Island 2019. Contact us for more information.www.goodingco.com
I would take a closer look at your VIN plate. It should be clean metal. The area doesn’t rust out. There shouldn’t be filler, weld spatter, or cooled weld puddles. You may see paint drips, or a visible rectangle around the digits.
When I look at this VIN, obviously biased by the info above.. I wonder if that is weld pooling above the 3 and spatter below the 3 and less so across most of the digits (see the base of the 0 and 5). I also see an artifact between the + and the 3 that may have seen an angle grinder.
Like I said I’m biased, because the VIN range doesn’t match the chassis.
View attachment 151971
Email your VIN to:
[email protected]
Inform them that you own this “car”, and would like the build info.
Also, move forward on locating the block VIN. Send that to BMW as well. It very well could be tied to the actual chassis. If you post real pictures of the exterior and interior, we can probably date the car.
Snap a pic of the Karmann plate in the driver’s door jamb.
Helpful vehicle dating:
Nose vents
Washer nozzles
speedometer
seatbelt config
door panels
seats
front bumper
Good question. Mine are stamped, as are the ones Don posted. The numbers on this car's firewall appear to be raised.Are all the numbers in firewall VIN etched/stamped in or are some raised up?
The numbers on this car's firewall appear to be raised.
You've got to cut both front fenders off to get to the rust that's likely destroyed the a-pillars. It's not a small undertaking. Not impossible by any means it's just what do you want to do with it. If you plan on selling it down the road the VIN presents some relatively serious issues. Again, it's all down to what you want to do with it. My 2 cents!Actually most of the rust is confined to the areas shown. It is deep but crawling under the car shows very solid undercarriage and when driven it handles quite stiffly.
For example the shock towers front and rear are fine, diff mount looks ok as do the subframe mounts. I will get it on the lift and have a real look tomorrow.
Not interested in making it perfect just good enough to paint it and have the paint last 5 years or so.