Re: Chevrolet Styling/Engineering Tag
In a conversation with Jim Minniker several years ago about these very cars I asked him about a specific car and was advised engineering kept track of the units by P number and that was what he needed to pull information about a specific car. Since the sticker posted did not have a number starting with a P as the two I posted do with the word engineering on them I speculate that unit was not an engineering/prototype car.
The document below indicates that the car was classified as an engn'd car but also note cars before s/n 40 were classified as prototypes. The 89 ZR-1 s/n 4 I found in S. Fla 3 yers ago with less than 300 miles had no sticker but had been used by a certified tech school to train ZR-1 mechanics in the early mid 90s.
In any case it is up to the reader to read what is presented and make up his own mind about what is conjecture and what is fact. I have done a lot of research on the 88-89 ZR-1s and am always willing to learn more.
Tyler
In a conversation with Jim Minniker several years ago about these very cars I asked him about a specific car and was advised engineering kept track of the units by P number and that was what he needed to pull information about a specific car. Since the sticker posted did not have a number starting with a P as the two I posted do with the word engineering on them I speculate that unit was not an engineering/prototype car.
The document below indicates that the car was classified as an engn'd car but also note cars before s/n 40 were classified as prototypes. The 89 ZR-1 s/n 4 I found in S. Fla 3 yers ago with less than 300 miles had no sticker but had been used by a certified tech school to train ZR-1 mechanics in the early mid 90s.
In any case it is up to the reader to read what is presented and make up his own mind about what is conjecture and what is fact. I have done a lot of research on the 88-89 ZR-1s and am always willing to learn more.
Tyler
Comment