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Good eye! Nothing like that on my 3A. Not only that, the date, if it is a date, is wrong. ST did put build dates on the commission plates of some of their later cars, but I've never noticed one on a sidescreen.I suspect they call 1959 the model year because it says so on commission plate!!! This is not DOM. Le
I dug out my Piggott, and it has a photo of that plate with the (1959), identifying it as a TR3B plate.Good eye! Nothing like that on my 3A. Not only that, the date, if it is a date, is wrong. ST did put build dates on the commission plates of some of their later cars, but I've never noticed one on a sidescreen.
Tom
I dug out my Piggott, and it has a photo of that plate with the (1959), identifying it as a TR3B plate.
No idea why, unless it had something to do with Standard Motor Co. being renamed in 1959. IIRC, SMC got renamed as Standard-Triumph International and a subsidiary named Standard Motor Co Ltd was created; all just before Leyland bought them in 1960. So the (1959) may have been part of the legal company name or something like that.
At the risk of belaboring this issue (which has never bothered me anyway), I see little consistency with any dates on the commission plates. E.G. my 1960 TR3, TS73117 has no date, while both of yours does. In addition the two TR4s I looked at had no dates either. I'm sure you are correct with the date as part of the legal name but how and why it got onto some commission plates and no others remains a mystery, to me at least. I guess the simple answer might be that Standard Triumph never put a high priority on consistency.The (1959) is a part of the legal name of the manufacturer. It is not on my '58 tag, but is on my two '60s, since that legal name is forever valid until stock is used up or other change is made to the tags. Le