I have seen some 1970 models with a blue w/black lettering label, about 1x4 inches, affixed to the driver door edge, at the lower part of the door, below the latch. I think the wording attested to the vehicle meeting all Federal Highway safety regulations in effect at time of manufacture. At the bottom of this label was the vehicle serial number and a date of manufacture. Was 1970 the first year for this label, or 1969?
1969 door jam labels
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Re: 1969 door jam labels
Sept 1, 1969. Hummmm. Quite interesting. Thank you.
I seem to remember the 1969 model year was extended for several months due to a strike at GM. Were there any 1969 models assembled after Sept 1st? If so, would they have had this label? Jim, is your '69 a vette?Last edited by Jeff B.; October 27, 2009, 12:37 PM.1967 Coupe 427-390 w/air- Top
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Re: 1969 door jam labels
Last day of 1969 production was December 15, 1969 IIRC. So yes, lo0ts of later 1969 Corvettes would have had this label.
Just to set the record straight: I still have an open challenge to anyone to produce a contemporary article/statement giving the reason for the extended 1969 model year production of Corvette and Camaro. I am still waiting.Terry- Top
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1969 production ran into the week of December 15. The body build date on my 69 is Q 15, December 15, a Monday. It has the Blue Certification label.
LMLarry
2002 Z51 Convertible
1969 L46 Convertible- Top
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Re: 1969 door jam labels
Last day of 1969 production was December 15, 1969 IIRC. So yes, lo0ts of later 1969 Corvettes would have had this label.
Just to set the record straight: I still have an open challenge to anyone to produce a contemporary article/statement giving the reason for the extended 1969 model year production of Corvette and Camaro. I am still waiting.Last edited by Kevin G.; March 29, 2010, 09:19 PM.- Top
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Re: 1969 door jam labels
Terry,
Do you think perhaps the late production date was a carry over from the 69 strike by chance?
The factory had lots of 69 parts already made/procured from their sources so they had to keep that year line running later than the norm based on production quantities vice the date on the calendar?
This is my guess, not factual documented data.
Jim Blakely- Top
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Re: 1969 door jam labels
I haven't published anything on the Camaro issue (other than some Camaro forum posts), but I know for a fact that the Camaro delay resulted from inability to stamp the rear quarter panels without splits; it showed up in final draw die tryout in the production stamping plant, and both the RH and LH draw dies had to be pulled, returned to the die construction source, redesigned, and re-cut from scratch. The trim, flange, and pierce dies also required rework as a result. I was right in the middle of it.
Dunno about the Corvette issue (I had already left the Corvette Group at that time), but I'd guess it was related to the lost units resulting from the April-May-June strike.- Top
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Re: 1969 door jam labels
We can all guess & speculate. And some of that may be correct, but I am puzzled by the lack of public explanation in any automotive publication that I have come across. Even The Wall Street Journal, which at the time published weekly production totals from ALL the automotive assembly plants, was silent on the model year extension. The silence is deafeningTerry- Top
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Re: 1969 door jam labels
"Lost units" meaning lost sales. I understand there were orders backed up for the same reason, but as I said below -- what really puzzles me is there is no publicly announced reason given. There was a press release that simply stated that 1969 production of Camaro and Corvette would continue. End of story. Even the press release was not widely covered by the automotive press, and I have yet to see anything anywhere stating why. That is probably my Holy Grail -- if you find it you can post it at my funeral.Terry- Top
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