The question came up over at the Corvette Forum as to the different keyways (and key blanks) that were used through the years. I made the following comments without real hard evidence. I'm wondering if anyone (Joe Lucia?) might have some knowledge on the subject.
I might guess that controlling the actual model year to keyway changes was not a real high priorety. The Corvette assembly plant installed the ignition lock cylinders from 1969 through 1979. (It was an easy, plug-in operation.) Around 1980 Saginaw began shipping steering columns with the lock cylinder installed and two ignition keys in a plastic box attached to the lock cylinder. I wonder if the Corvette arrived at the dealer with that little box attached?
Why waste time at the end of a model year trying to coordinate steering column/lock cylinder inventory and sending back lock cylinders and steering columns when dealers had full sets of key blanks and could easily handle different keys that might overlap from one year to the next.
Here is a link to the actual post.
http://forums.corvetteforum.com/c3-g...ition-key.html
Jim
I might guess that controlling the actual model year to keyway changes was not a real high priorety. The Corvette assembly plant installed the ignition lock cylinders from 1969 through 1979. (It was an easy, plug-in operation.) Around 1980 Saginaw began shipping steering columns with the lock cylinder installed and two ignition keys in a plastic box attached to the lock cylinder. I wonder if the Corvette arrived at the dealer with that little box attached?
Why waste time at the end of a model year trying to coordinate steering column/lock cylinder inventory and sending back lock cylinders and steering columns when dealers had full sets of key blanks and could easily handle different keys that might overlap from one year to the next.
Here is a link to the actual post.
http://forums.corvetteforum.com/c3-g...ition-key.html
Jim
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