There is data for C2 specific to VIN and S/N on FI units printed that shows random non-sequential and rather mixed array of VIN numbers vs FI 7017375 unit S/N's gathered from C2 owners at the time of Noland Adams publishing "Corvette Restoration Technical Guide Vol.2".
Is there any other source of this data for comparison, as we all know that when the 7017375 unit in 1962 and 1963 was grabbed from the pallet at the factory for installation on the 327 motor, not all went well for C2 assembly (ie units had to come off due to casting errors and non-functioning FI units for several reasons; therefore the units 'went to the bench for rework' and later found 'a home' on another VIN C2 Corvette more than likely out of sequence by large numbers. Also, several running changes (change orders) from development by engineering predicated design changes, that also accumulated on the assembly floor.
As we know, our NCRS judging staff dictates that 'all 7017375 FI units' when judged should fit an orderly sequential range' when judging Corvettes and penalize a correct assembled factory Corvette due to a VIN with an out of order S/N range FI unit.
What say NCRS members on this subject ?
Is there any other source of this data for comparison, as we all know that when the 7017375 unit in 1962 and 1963 was grabbed from the pallet at the factory for installation on the 327 motor, not all went well for C2 assembly (ie units had to come off due to casting errors and non-functioning FI units for several reasons; therefore the units 'went to the bench for rework' and later found 'a home' on another VIN C2 Corvette more than likely out of sequence by large numbers. Also, several running changes (change orders) from development by engineering predicated design changes, that also accumulated on the assembly floor.
As we know, our NCRS judging staff dictates that 'all 7017375 FI units' when judged should fit an orderly sequential range' when judging Corvettes and penalize a correct assembled factory Corvette due to a VIN with an out of order S/N range FI unit.
What say NCRS members on this subject ?
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