Austin
Enthusiast
Thanks, Chris (Firewater) for going out and taking these pics. These pics make me really want a red/white coupe.
The reason they skip the stripes in the license area is for economics; too expensive to mask that area.
Anthony, I would sure suggest to you and everyone, not to remove the VCA sticker as it is very pricey to replace, and years down the road, many folks will want the car to be authentic. We wanted to get said sticker for some of the buyers of the Yellow Fever Edition SRT-10 and were floored with how expensive the decal is. Done in such small numbers , the pricing is near Platinum level, so probably a great idea to leave it on.
The reason they skip the stripes in the license area is for economics; too expensive to mask that area.
Do you really believe that??
Lets say it took an expert painter 1 hour to mask the 1' truck area at say $100 an hour. Do you think anyone is going to notice $100 on a $90,000 car??
The reason they skip the stripes in the license area is for economics; too expensive to mask that area.
Do you really believe that??
Lets say it took an expert painter 1 hour to mask the 1' truck area at say $100 an hour. Do you think anyone is going to notice $100 on a $90,000 car??
Now... the real story:
In '96 there was a real dilemma, as all parts were painted prior to assembly, and even a small fraction of an inch differential between the bumper and the license plate area stripes, was causing a very visible misalignment of the stripe in the eyes of the assembler (and of course, Dodge's concern that owners would find it uncomfortable as well). It created a massive amount of extra time needed to get the bumper/rear valance just right... so all matched perrrfectly.
SO, in '97, they didn't stripe the license plate area.... and ****! Never an alignment problem, as there was no stripe present in close proximity from one panel to the next!!!
Whether this was thought about for our current generation of coupes... who knows, but it seems logical that it would present the same problem today, as it did WAY back in '96!
The reason they skip the stripes in the license area is for economics; too expensive to mask that area.
Do you really believe that??
Lets say it took an expert painter 1 hour to mask the 1' truck area at say $100 an hour. Do you think anyone is going to notice $100 on a $90,000 car??
Now... the real story:
In '96 there was a real dilemma, as all parts were painted prior to assembly, and even a small fraction of an inch differential between the bumper and the license plate area stripes, was causing a very visible misalignment of the stripe in the eyes of the assembler (and of course, Dodge's concern that owners would find it uncomfortable as well). It created a massive amount of extra time needed to get the bumper/rear valance just right... so all matched perrrfectly.
SO, in '97, they didn't stripe the license plate area.... and ****! Never an alignment problem, as there was no stripe present in close proximity from one panel to the next!!!
Whether this was thought about for our current generation of coupes... who knows, but it seems logical that it would present the same problem today, as it did WAY back in '96!
Ummmmm Joe, the trunk lid is one piece.
Joe - the alignment argument does not hold water when they paint the stripes AFTER the car is built. Certainly did in 1996 though.
Joe - the alignment argument does not hold water when they paint the stripes AFTER the car is built. Certainly did in 1996 though.
Incorrect. All panels showed up at the factory striped for gen 2 cars. This has been the case since 96, I in fact have pictures of hoods and roof panels sitting in racks at CAAP that are striped from 1996. The stripes were originally done through the plate area although it was discontinued as keeping the stripes lined up was proving to be quite difficult. This then went on to be one of the unintended unique factors of the 96 GTS along with the more brilliant shining wheels. Due to not painting the stripes through the plate area from 97 up, the dimensions were slightly different. I am not 100% sure if the SRT-c's are the same way or not.