1317 1585
This is awesome.
I have seen many sheets with numbers but this is the first sheet with numbers that I have seen that connects specific parts of the car that the numbers were drawn on with the numbers on the sheet.
On the destroyed sheet that was under the carpet, was there any trace of the same sequence of numbers on the bottom?
At 10:14 there is the shot of the sheet when the carpet was first pulled up. Part of the sheet is still there on the bottom left hand corner and I suspect the other part of that sheet was on the carpet. Just curious if any of those numbers survived on the sheet.
Great video! Thanks for posting it.
To add to Tom's post; since I have been disassembling the car, I have some information for the MoPar community. I have been fortunate to be able to restore Bill C's/FuryGT's 71 GT and have had a chance to disassemble and examine four or five Fury GT cars.
So the numbers on the bottom of the Broadcast sheet, in the case of this Fury GT 6BBL, built at this plant, (not to claim this is true for ALL Chrysler cars at ALL plants) was for the line workers while assembling the car, I believe they are build codes and represent the last two digits in "line part number". FuryGT's promo 1971GT has the similar codes written in yellow grease pencil, that I believe are for the glass, carpet and console. The same is true for the Red 6BBL GT in this post the codes are for the line workers to know what part to get so they don't have to look at the "Line Build Sheet". (not the Broadcast Sheet/2 different things); the part numbers are on the door, likely written by the "Line Manager" of that section of the "line", so there would be less errors when installing parts,...."look at the door dummy", the part number is there!
So, I've been talking to a few known MoPar restoration folks in the industry and have been asking for more details/information etc. If anyone has or can document codes and numbers on any C body Broadcast Sheets and show the numbers on/in the cars etc, that would be very helpful. It is my opinion that at least some of the codes on the bottom of Broadcast Sheets were for specific parts of the build of that car. I am aware that many E/B/A body Mopar's have notes and numbers on the bottom of Broadcast Sheets; some are "time stamps" or notes for the line manager/ workers etc., notes for parts, assembly etc.
In this case I believe the numbers on the Broadcast Sheet and then written on the door are for glass/carpet/seats and possibly the remote mirror....they are there for the line workers to confirm.
Also, after doing more research, (which you really have to disassemble a car to do)....the
B-S that is written on the red 6BBL fury is for the carpet and seat callout. The B-S means "Bucket Seats", which is verified by the manufactures tag (JP Stevens) they list the part, the number, the color and B-S, for Bucket Seat carpet. So that mystery is solved!
I once owned a 1969 Fury I that was a Washington State Liquor Control Board, car...AKA the "booze cops" as alcohol was regulated back in the day. The bottom of the Broadcast Sheet had three X's in it like this:
X X X which is the old way of identifying "Whiskey" Tripple XXX means booze. It was a "joke" on the line, I'm sure, as the car was ordered directly from the State of Washington Liquor Control Board......the car is in Germany now, fully restored.
So, much more to research on ALL MoPars but moving forward at least,...if you can help, please reach out.