All -
I'm sorry for the length of this reply, but Doug raises some issues that are not easily addressed in just a few sentences.
Doug,
I'm very sorry you were displeased after your brief e-mail exchange with me. You didn't tell me what you were looking for in the registry, just that you couldn't find the registry on-line. Since you mentioned you had submitted the data for your car (in 2010), I sent you a copy of your entry in the registry so you could see what it looked like (format, details recorded, etc.).Tell me what information you were trying to find, and I'll see what I can do. Your statement that I will provide only what someone has personally submitted to the registry IS NOT CORRECT!
I will provide ANY information in the registry about a car, or statistics developed from the complete registry, to anyone who asks EXCEPT I cannot release names/addresses/telephone numbers/e-mail addresses of owners or ex-owners to third parties without first obtaining approval from the person whose data it is. There are at least a couple good reasons for that, and one exception:
1. The original registries (in the USA) were started by the AHCA in the mid-1980s. By published club policy, personal data would not be released to third parties without permission. When I became BJ8 registrar in 1998, I had to agree to protect the personal data that was provided to me by AHCA, and I do.
2. Some people will provide any information asked for by the registry and more. But there are some who are sensitive about such things as the VIN of their car and their contact information and they would not participate in the registries if that data were indiscriminately released to the world without their knowledge. For several years, I also obtained information from the AHCUSA, but that stopped with a change of officers a few years ago due to concern about privacy of the personal data, but primarily due to the fear of liability of the club if the personal data was released and caused the club to be sued by some irate club member. The real effect of that change was that the ownership history of a lot of cars is now being lost to some individual owners of the future because there is no central place to record it.
EXCEPTION: It is my policy to release personal contact information for owners of a car, but ONLY to other owners of the same car if they ask. If that can't be done to allow one owner of a given car to contact another previous or later owner, then there is no reason to document the personal data in the first place. And I have never had anyone complain about that use of their data.
It is our common interest in the CARS that bring us all together into this community. But it is the PEOPLE who give the cars meaning.
The registry has evolved over the years in an effort to become a valuable and useful tool to the worldwide BJ8 community. Rather than a simple list of members of a particular club and the VINs of the cars they own (as it was up to 1998), my goal became to identify every single BJ8 that still exists (and those that don't, when possible to determine that), and to record some specific details about each. These details collected together on a large number of cars can allow us to make comparisons, draw conclusions, and gain understanding about how the cars were originally manufactured, and how they are configured and distributed around the world today. They also reveal patterns that make it possible to identify when something is not quite right -- is this engine or body plate original to this car? Is the VIN correct for the other details? Are the claims on eBay - or by any other seller - accurate ("two-owner car", when I have a record of six previous owners?)
I have learnedthat most owners are very interested in the previous ownership history of theircars, but that there are precious few resources to allow anyone to trace the history of their car. So, the registry provides a central location for the continuous ownership record of each car, and I have developed quite a few resources to allow me to identify previous owners.
What good is the BJ8 Registry? Well, let me count the ways -- or a few examples, at least.
Did you hear of the guy last year who recovered his BJ8 42 years after it was stolen from him? That was made possible by the registry. He told me in 2006 that it had been stolen from him in 1970 in Philadelphia. I entered the VIN into the registry with his personal data and the note about the theft. I saw a car with the same VIN and the correct color come up for sale on eBay in May 2012 and notified him, and he took it from there. He would have been out of luck had I not had his name/address/telephone/e-mail recorded so I could get in touch with him.
Last week, an owner in France was finally able to establish the true identity of his car, which has been registered with an incorrect VIN for the last 20 years. The registry provided advice on where to find the appropriate evidence, and some guidance on how to get the car re-registered with its correct number.
I'll let forum member rdkeysor relate how the registry was helpful to him in getting his car properly registered in Florida when the authorities were giving him a hard time, although it wasn't a BJ8. Ditto a car in Canada being refused registration because the VIN on the California title did not match the VIN plate exactly. Or all the scam sales attempted on eBay and quickly shut down because the registry data allowed immediately identifying them as a scam. And the car in The Netherlands that now has its original VIN plate because it was sent to me by a former owner in the USA. The original Passport to Service warranty booklet for two other cars and one original Drivers Handbook that have been returned to the current owners. Or the engine serial number plate being sold on eBay that now is back with the engine it belongs to. Or helping someone locate a particular car that was owned by his father back in the '70s so he could buy it. As mentioned before, I have access to the BMIHT data without having to order a certificate, and therefore the registry provides a FREE alternative for thousands of cars to a certificate if the owner only wants the data. I could go on, but if you want more examples, just ask, and please give me another chance to make the registry serve you.
As of today, the registry has records for 8,107 cars worldwide, which is approaching 50% of the total originally manufactured.