1965 Newport Identification Help

What a great car, good for you! I admire your gumtion. Get that mechanical stuff worked out first before you start thinking about body work, that body doesn't look at all bad. The mechanical stuff will occupy you for a coupla years! lol! (ask me how I know)
Thanks BigWally!
I agree, Chrysler made a great one. It's hard to believe that a car can still be in this condition 60 years after being built. For sure I'll be focusing on mechanical components before the cosmetic or aesthetic ones. I live up on a hill so brakes will be of utmost importance haha. I am a father of 3 little ones and my wife restricted my restoration budget to $100 a month for this project, so with those time and budget constraints it will take at least 2 years for the mechanical stuff lol.
 
If you have lien papers from the tow company, they've already gone through the process of clearing the title, or, they wouldn't have been able to sell it. I've bought hundreds of vehicles that way when I was in business.
Hi Cudamark,

I do have lien papers from the tow company. Thank you for clarifying that issue! I was really starting to worry that maybe I could lose the car. I am so relieved! I would appreciate any other input you have on how to go about getting a title for this car.
 
On any out of the ordinary registration or title change, I like using a private registration business. I have a local one who used to work for the DMV, so, knows all the ins and outs of getting something done properly. They can sometimes avoid problems before they start.
 
Tossing those Oldsmobile wheel covers will make the first big improvement.
The interior condition looks great, and will save you many dollars.
I'm totally digging the dog dish wheel cover police car look, but I must focus on the mechanical stuff for now. I did some cleaning of the interior yesterday and I was really pleased with how well kept the interior is. Other than some cracking at the top of the rear seat, everything looks great! I'm grateful for that.
 
Yeah, I was thinking the dog dishes would work for that car, too.
Being a low option Newport, rather than a New Yorker, the dog dishes would be appropriate.
You should get a dash cover now, before the cracking starts. I bet you could come up with some carpet to cover the package shelf and top of the rear seat to help preserve it for a while.
I put carpet dash covers on both of my cars (Jeep and Camry,) to protect them, and as a side benefit, the dash reflection on the windshield is nearly eliminated.
 
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Dog dishes … ‘66 specific I believe.

IMG_2956.jpeg
 
Yeah, I was thinking the dog dishes would work for that car, too.
Being a low option Newport, rather than a New Yorker, the dog dishes would be appropriate.
You should get a dash cover now, before the cracking starts. I bet you could come up with some carpet to cover the package shelf and top of the rear seat to help preserve it for a while.
I put carpet dash covers on both of my cars (Jeep and Camry,) to protect them, and as a side benefit, the dash reflection on the windshield is nearly eliminated.
I think that would would be fitting with the bare bones theme of this Newport.
I currently have a car cover on it while I work on getting it running but I will for sure be covering up those surfaces. The California sun is unforgiving.
 
Hello everyone,

Newbie here. For my first ever project car I bought a 1965 Newport 2-door hardtop with a 3-speed manual. I got it from a tow yard so they had no history to provide. I've been looking through the service manual to learn more about the car and I need help identifying the engine and carburetor. The engine looks like the stock 383 that these cars come equipped with from the factory but I haven't actually looked at the stamping on the block to make sure of it. I have to remove a lot of grime to be able to see that yet. The carburetor is missing the tag with the model number but there is a sticker that might help. It says Holley remanufactured so I'm thinking that the original carburetor was replaced. I'm hoping to get a rebuild kit for it so any help would be appreciated. I'll post the serial number and body plate too if anyone is able to help me decipher the meaning.
Thanks in advance.

-Captain Rust BucketView attachment 727037View attachment 727030View attachment 727032View attachment 727036View attachment 727035View attachment 727033View attachment 727034
Hi, Captain: Thanks for posting the VIN and fender tag images. They (nearly) enabled me to run the data through my work in progress decoder and produce the attached (N/C, ever report). Several questions of you: Do you see a very faint C1 stamped in front of the embossed digits of the VIN tag? Do the C & 1 appear on your title? Does the car have the remote-adjustable outside LH rear view mirror or just a manual adjusted outside LH mirror? Does the car have a padded dash (I have never seen a 5 under the J on a '65 before so took a stab at J5. Other options include: Air Foam Seats F&R, Black Vinyl Roof, Trailer Towing Package or a lower body molding. Just an error on the tag-adjacent H% is power windows. Got them? Your thoughts based on what you see on the car?)?, Please confirm the 4 seat belt option and all the other details shown. Thanks in advance for your feedback. Other readers are invited to chime in on any aspect of my decoder report

65 NP 2DHT FCBO 9-7-25.jpg
 
Hi, Captain: Thanks for posting the VIN and fender tag images. They (nearly) enabled me to run the data through my work in progress decoder and produce the attached (N/C, ever report). Several questions of you: Do you see a very faint C1 stamped in front of the embossed digits of the VIN tag? Do the C & 1 appear on your title? Does the car have the remote-adjustable outside LH rear view mirror or just a manual adjusted outside LH mirror? Does the car have a padded dash (I have never seen a 5 under the J on a '65 before so took a stab at J5. Other options include: Air Foam Seats F&R, Black Vinyl Roof, Trailer Towing Package or a lower body molding. Just an error on the tag-adjacent H% is power windows. Got them? Your thoughts based on what you see on the car?)?, Please confirm the 4 seat belt option and all the other details shown. Thanks in advance for your feedback. Other readers are invited to chime in on any aspect of my decoder report

View attachment 734039
I see an error already as my reference says the L4B TRM stands for blue vinyl and it should be BURGUNDY. I'll re-run the report after your feedback.
 
All '65 Chryslers had a padded dash, standard. According to what I found at Hamtramck Historical.

I happened to discover that ONE powertrain option was probably extremely rare on '65 Newports, and especially '65 Newport Town & Country wagons . . . 383/315 with a factory 4-speed manual transmission. In the Dealer Order Guide and Data Book.

Enjoy!
CBODY67
 
Hi, Captain: Thanks for posting the VIN and fender tag images. They (nearly) enabled me to run the data through my work in progress decoder and produce the attached (N/C, ever report). Several questions of you: Do you see a very faint C1 stamped in front of the embossed digits of the VIN tag? Do the C & 1 appear on your title? Does the car have the remote-adjustable outside LH rear view mirror or just a manual adjusted outside LH mirror? Does the car have a padded dash (I have never seen a 5 under the J on a '65 before so took a stab at J5. Other options include: Air Foam Seats F&R, Black Vinyl Roof, Trailer Towing Package or a lower body molding. Just an error on the tag-adjacent H% is power windows. Got them? Your thoughts based on what you see on the car?)?, Please confirm the 4 seat belt option and all the other details shown. Thanks in advance for your feedback. Other readers are invited to chime in on any aspect of my decoder report

View attachment 734039
Hi Torky, thanks for the reply. Yes, it looks like a very feint C1 after the Vin. I hadn't noticed that until you pointed that out. Yes, it's on the title. It's a manual adjust LH mirror. Yes, padded dashboard. I don't know what kind of foam on the seats. No vinyl roof, I wonder if that was replaced at some point. I'm not sure what the trailer towing package would include, but I don't think it has any towing features as far as I know. I don't know about lower body molding. No power windows. I don't know about the seat belts. My car had none installed and I found 1 and a half sets in the trunk along with some other parts. PO also replaced the original radio unfortunately so I can't comment on that. The seats are blue vinyl btw. @darth_linux was commenting on the burgundy interior of his beautiful 1966 Chrysler Newport.
 
In the Library section of www.hamtramck-historical.com, (might need to manually input that address), you can find the Dealer Order Guide and such to compare options and basic equipment on your car to what was either optional or standard equipment that model year. Plus the codes for the interior seat and seat/configuration availabilities.

CBODY67
 
I see an error already as my reference says the L4B TRM stands for blue vinyl and it should be BURGUNDY. I'll re-run the report after your feedback.
Further update. Interior is blue vinyl. Burgundy was someone else's car. Anything unusual at all on the car? I hope the fender-mounted turn signal indicators operate--a nice feature. Are there any indications the possible factory belts had been installed and removed?
 
Good luck with the title process. Long ago I went through the lien sale process in California. It is possible!

Regarding rust, I have been following this guy and he’s very good and knowledgeable:

 
Other readers are invited to chime in on any aspect of my decoder report

CAR NUMBER: VIN assignment has nothing to do with production. It is administrative in nature. You cannot extrapolate that a car was #123456 off the line based on a VIN of 123456. It didn't work that way. If you look at a bowl of apples sitting on a table, you can count the number of apples in the bowl but doing so does not tell you in what order they were picked. VINs only count. They tell you nothing about order.

Evidence also exists that not all VINs were actually issued leaving gaps in VIN ranges (and, by the way, totally screwing with accepted production numbers. OH MY!)

A fender tag is meant to be a durable traveling accounting of, generally, modifications required to the body in white to fit certain options or parameters, (A/C cowls, radiator support width, four speed applications), holes that may need to be punched in panels for things such as for a tachometer, radio antenna, mirrors, specific model moldings, brackets or supports that need to be added such as console or buddy seat, paint, trim, stripes and general administrative data unique to that car such as the sales order/VON or VIN, assembly criteria such as built for US, Canada or Export market.

A fender tag is not meant to convey all options that came on a car nor options that fall outside of the general guidelines above. Different plant coded differently making decoding tags from that era much harder to decode than later. Codes change year to year. Interior options are not usually or likely coded on a tag.

Meaning.....code 2/2 for 1965 likely indicates code 512 LH outside remote chrome mirror. This required a modification to the body per the above parameters and is a pretty standard fender tag code.

AB/60 = 383-2bbl rated at 315 horse.
D/1 three speed column shift transmission
V/3 473 back up lights. Not a light package

PAINT : EE1 dark blue metallic

Sales Order (SO) number 12206 is administrative and related to billing and other administrative functions. It has, again, nothing to do with production. It doesn't refer to an in plant marshaling area. It does not refer to a production sequence. It's function is order tracking, billing and other things like shipping to the dealer.

For a 623 SPD, this Chrysler (12) is, likely, the 206th order generated. It could be the first car down the line at Newark on June 17th, it could be the last car down the line on July 7th. We will never know. Car 62312207, the next Chrysler order generated with an SPD of 626, could be a convertible assigned to the Jefferson plant. That car could be the last car down the line on June 20th. It could be the first car down the line on July 10th. We will never know.

Virtually all 1965 Chrysler SO numbers start with 12 or 13. That's simply how Chrysler Corporation used SO numbers to indicate a hierarchy within the corporation. Low price level '65 Valiants and Barracuda (low cost Plymouth A bodies) start with 00 and the high cost Imperials complete the concept by starting with 14. The various other A, B and C body Dodges and Plymouths have their own specific two digit designations inserted within these two parameters. As the price line goes up the corporate ladder, so goes the first digits of the SO number.

The exception to the two digit assignment is when the car is produced for a specific purpose such as show car, lease car, fleet car, dealer demo, special order or other non traditional retail direct sale to the end user. Again, the SO is an administrative function so these special cars are tracked differently via special SO numbers. You'll see 1965 cars with the SO starting with 33, 38, 50, 99. This indicates the car was built for something intended outside the normal retail sale realm or required special handling.

In later years, we see this special intent concept expressed in the SO or Vehicle Order Number (VON) by letters (A, B, C, E, T, Q, M codes, etc) or numbers (928 sunroof car, 927 special paint, 925 package car, etc).
 
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